View clinical trials related to Vitamin B 12 Deficiency.
Filter by:Older adults are recommended to meet their daily vitamin B12 (B12) requirements by consuming foods with added B12 and/or taking B12 supplements (i.e. sources of free B12) because of an age-related decreased digestion and absorption capacity for food-bound B12. Currently, B12 is not added to foods in Canada, except for simulated dairy and meat products. Yoghurt with added B12 is a novel dairy product that could fill a gap that presently exists in the Canadian market and has the potential to provide Canadian older adults with an alternative dietary source of B12 that could help improve their B12 status. Thus, the objective of this study was to assess the efficacy of the daily consumption of one serving of yoghurt fortified with B12 versus unfortified yoghurt for 8 weeks on the B12 status of healthy older adults, assessed using serum total B12. The primary hypothesis of this study was that the daily consumption of B12-fortified yoghurt would increase serum total B12 concentration of older adults compared to the consumption of unfortified yoghurts.
Infertility affects around 15 % of couples in their reproductive years. Even though the use of assisted reproductive technologies (ART) in aforementioned couples is increasing, their success rate is still relatively low. Hence it is important to identify and better understand potential modifiable dietary and lifestyle risk factors that may influence the success of ART. This study will include women undergoing IVF with a view to investigating the relationship between preconception dietary patterns, body composition, physical activity level, serum values of vitamin B9, vitamin B12 and vitamin D and the outcomes of IVF, such as the number of obtained oocytes, fertilization rate and clinical pregnancy. Main hypothesis is that women undergoing IVF, who eat a balanced diet, maintain healthy body weight and have adequate serum levels of vitamin B9, vitamin B12 and vitamin D, have a higher chance of achieving better IVF outcomes.
The aim of this pilot study is to conduct a study on geriatric population in Slovenia (non-users of dietary supplements/medicines with vitamine D, vitamin B12 and protein) and assess deficiency of selected nutrients, and to investigate the efficiency of the innovative food supplement prototype in improving nutritional status of elderly adults.
This is an intervention study aiming to understand the bioavailability of vitamin B12 from nori for vegetarians.
This pilot aims to generate data that are critical for informing the design of a planned, more detailed study to evaluate the effect of multiple micronutrient (MN)-fortified bouillon cube on biomarkers of nutrient status of women and children. Data collection includes measures of nutritional status and dietary intake among women and children and their households in communities in northern Ghana.
In a retrospective study with existing values of vitamin B12 and holotranscobalamin 4 strategies are simulated and the results and costs are compared. Generally, cobalamin ist substituted by intramuscular administration. However, oral preparations are also available. Aims of the focus groups are to investigate the awareness of a (potential) deficiency and to identify a therapy for best adherence.
Supplementation with Iron and folate have been part of a worldwide strategy targeting anaemia and neural tube defects for many years. However, vitamin B12 deficiency has received much less attention. High prevalence of deficiency in mothers in the antenatal period and in their infants, has been documented. Multiple case series document the neurological consequences of severe deficiency and their reversal with B-12. Trials on the subject are limited and those available have either used an ineffective dose or for a short duration. Therefore, we propose this randomised controlled trial to compare the efficacy of two different doses (pharmacological and preventive) of maternal Vitamin B-12 supplementation in improving infant B12 deficiency and neurodevelopment. We propose to undertake a multi-centric trial in India and Nepal given the high prevalence of deficiency reported from these countries and to allow a wider socio-demographic spectrum (Pay-for-service hospital catering to middle income populace from India and a free-care public hospital catering to lower income groups from Nepal). We will recruit 720 vegetarian, pregnant women from the antenatal clinics of the Indian and Nepalese centres at their first antenatal visit. Elderly primi mothers, taking B12 supplementation, multiple gestations, chronic medical conditions, anticipating moving out of the city, treated for infertility or with known psychological illnesses will be excluded. In Stage 1, recruited mothers will be randomized into 2 equal groups (360 each). Group 1-Daily 250 μg Vitamin B12 supplementation. Group 2-Daily 50 μg Vitamin B12 supplementation. B-12 will be started in 1st trimester and continue up to 6 months post-partum. In Stage 2, the birth and post-delivery course of the new-born will be monitored and documented for any morbidity. At 9 months, the neurodevelopmental, complementary feeding and home environment will be assessed and infant B12 status will be determined. The two groups will be compared for the primary (neurodevelopment) and secondary outcomes (biochemical parameters in mother and infant). The results of this study will be used to generate scientific evidence on whether B-12 should be supplemented in vegetarian pregnant women with a view to preventing B-12 deficiency and its neurodevelopmental consequences in the infant.
STUDY DESIGN: Phase I Clinical Trial The researchers set out to assess the effectiveness of transdermal iontophoretic administration of Vitamin B12 (V.B12) under three different skin preparatory conditions. SETTING: James J. Peters Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Bronx, NY) BACKGROUND: Poor skin permeability precludes the use of transdermal route from being used in common clinical practice for rapid and precise administration of medications through intact skin that are expected to have a systemic effect. The researchers determined the relative effectiveness of an unconventional transdermal iontophoresis technique for the administration of Vitamin B12 (V.B12) under three different skin preparatory conditions. METHODS: During this study, Vitamin B12 (V.B12) was administered through the skin of volunteer human research subjects. Iontophoresis was used as transdermal medication delivery modality after pre-treatment of the skin in 3 different ways. The sequence of skin preparations was arranged in a random order for each subject. Method 1 was called "No Prep", serving as the control approach; method 2 was called "Oleic Acid" application to the skin for 40 minutes; and method 3 was hair "Epilation" (e.g. hair removal by plucking). Fifteen milligrams of aqueous solution of V.B12 was administered through intact, previously unused skin of an anterior thigh during all 3 tests. Chemoluminescence, on an automated laboratory reader Advia Centaur-XP, was used to determine the serum concentration of V.B12 prior to and after transdermal iontophoretic delivery. All 3 experiments were performed on the same day within an hour of each other. The subject's blood was drawn prior and 10 minutes after the 20-minute long sessions of transdermal V.B12 iontophoresis. We were able to calculate the increase in serum V.B12 concentration and based on estimated blood volume, the total quantity and percent dose delivered systemically.
Preoperative anaemia is common in surgery, with a prevalence between 10 and 50 %, and is an independent risk factor for morbidity and mortality. Anaemia is mostly the result of an inadequate erythropoiesis due to iron deficiency, lack of vitamin B12 or folate, and bone marrow diseases. Among the elderly, renal disease and chronic inflammation account for approximately one-third of all anaemia incidences. The aim of this study is to provide detailed data about the prevalence of preoperative deficiencies in iron, vitamin B12 and/or folate and the presence of underlying renal or chronic diseases in patients undergoing major surgery.
500 participants of the vegan/vegetarian congress VegMed are to be included, which should answer once (cross-sectional study) a medicine socio-behaviorist questionnaire on the topic "supplementation of critical nutrients in a plant-based diet" at the VegMed congress on 21/04/2018. The aim of the study is to understand how experts in this field behave and whether actions taken follow official recommendations.