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      Bioavailability of Vitamin B12

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          Abstract

          Vitamin B12 deficiency is common in people of all ages who consume a low intake of animal-source foods, including populations in developing countries. It is also prevalent among the elderly, even in wealthier countries, due to their malabsorption of B12 from food. Several methods have been applied to diagnose vitamin B12 malabsorption, including Schillings test, which is now used rarely, but these do not quantify percent bioavailability. Most of the information on B12 bioavailability from foods was collected 40 to 50 years ago, using radioactive isotopes of cobalt to label the corrinoid ring. The data are sparse, and the level of radioactivity required for in vivo labeling of animal tissues can be prohibitive. A newer method under development uses a low dose of radioactivity as 14C-labeled B12, with measurement of the isotope excreted in urine and feces by accelerator mass spectrometry. This test has revealed that the unabsorbed vitamin is degraded in the intestine. The percent bioavailability is inversely proportional to the dose consumed due to saturation of the active absorption process, even within the range of usual intake from foods. This has important implications for the assessment and interpretation of bioavailability values, setting dietary requirements, and interpreting relationships between intake and status of the vitamin.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          vit
          122286
          International Journal for Vitamin and Nutrition Research
          Hogrefe AG, Bern
          0300-9831
          1664-2821
          1 October 2010
          7 January 2013
          : 80
          : 45 ( otherID: XPM857760U52 )
          : 330-335
          Affiliations
          [ 1 ] USDA, ARS Western Human Nutrition Research Center, University of California, Davis, CA, USA
          Article
          E16U765T54060833
          10.1024/0300-9831/a000041
          21462117
          3b0b9bfb-8775-4964-ac03-034deca1d2b2
          History
          Categories
          Articles to the Special Issue

          Endocrinology & Diabetes,Medicine,Nutrition & Dietetics
          bioavailability,cobalamin,absorption,vitamin B12

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