Follow Healthline   |   Healthline on TwitterTwitter   |   Healthline on FacebookFacebook
Symptom Search   |   Treatment Search   |   Doctor Search   |   Drug Search

Anemia - B12 deficiency Health Article

Advertisement
Marketplace
Licensed from
Page: 1 2 Next >

Definition

B12 deficiency anemia is a low red blood cell count due to a lack of vitamin B12.

Alternative Names

Macrocytic anemia

Causes, incidence, and risk factors

Vitamin B12 is essential for normal nervous system function and blood cell production. The main sources of vitamin B12 include meat, eggs, and dairy products. For vitamin B12 to be sufficiently absorbed by the body, it must bind to intrinsic factor, a protein released by cells in the stomach. The combination of vitamin B12 bound to intrinsic factor is absorbed in the final part of the small intestine.

Causes of vitamin B12 deficiency include:

  • Abdominal or intestinal surgery that affects intrinsic factor production or absorption
  • A diet low in vitamin B12 (for example, a strict vegetarian diet that excludes all meat, fish, dairy products, and eggs)
  • Chronic alcoholism
  • Crohn's disease
  • Infection with the fish tape worm
  • Intestinal malabsorption disorders
  • Pernicious anemia, which is caused by the destruction of intrinsic factor by the immune system

The risk factors are related to the causes.

Symptoms

Signs and tests

A physical exam may show problems with reflexes or positive Babinski reflex.

The following tests may be done:

Treatment

Treatment depends on the specific cause of B12 deficiency anemia.

Pernicious anemia requires lifelong vitamin B12 injections. People with anemia due to a lack of dietary vitamin B12 may be told to take vitamin supplements and follow a more balanced diet. Treatment may start with vitamin B12 injections.

Anemia caused by malabsorption is treated with vitamin B12 injections until the condition improves.

Expectations (prognosis)

Treatment for this form of anemia is usually effective.

Page: 1 2 Next >
Reviewer Info: David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine; and Yi-Bin Chen, MD, Leukemia/Bone Marrow Transplant Program, Massachusetts General Hospital. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.; ADAM Health Illustrated Encyclopedia, 11/23/2008
 
3D Body Maps
Advertisement
Back to Top