Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition | 2021

Response to Letter: Insufficiency of B vitamins with its possible clinical implications

 
 
 

Abstract


Copyright © 2021 JCBN 2021 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creat ve Commons Attribution Licens , which permit unrest icted use, distribution, and reproduction i any medium, p o vided the original work is prop rly cit d. Oni i d I hida have commented on our re ent r v ew that vitamin B1 deficiency is a health problem in cancer patients. Our review, however, has by no means focused on the secondary causes of vitamin deficiency, but is intended to review the significance of vitamin deficiency/insufficiency from the viewpoint of public health with the hope to be of help for the future determination of Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI), which proposes reference values of desirable dietary intake of energy and nutrients for Japanese people to maintain and promote their health status. Our scope is that primary vitamin deficiency disease such as beriberi and rickets have now become far less common, but even vitamin insufficiency, milder than deficiency, is a significant risk for various diseases, and of great societal importance. There have been numerous reports that various diseases can be the secondary causes of vitamin deficiency/insufficiency. For example, we have reported the high prevalence of vitamin D, vitamin K, and vitamin B12 deficiency/insufficiency in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) due to malabsorption. Other examples include vitamin B12 deficiency due to malabsorption in patients after gastrectomy, and vitamin C deficiency in critically ill patients due to markedly increased requirement. Regarding vitamin B1 deficiency, various risk factors have been reported including alcoholism, malnutrition, refeeding syndrome, bariatric surgery, other gastrointestinal tract surgery, critical illness, diabetes mellitus, obesity, hyperemesis gravidarum, chronic kidney disease on dialysis, cancer, furosemide intake, and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Additionally, vitamin deficiency can also be caused by the therapeutic drugs; i.e., vitamin B12 deficiency due to anti-diabetic drug; metformin, (7)

Volume 68
Pages 2 - 2
DOI 10.3164/jcbn.20-158_res
Language English
Journal Journal of Clinical Biochemistry and Nutrition

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