Vitamin B deficiency Flashcards Preview

YR3: Gastro LO's > Vitamin B deficiency > Flashcards

Flashcards in Vitamin B deficiency Deck (16)
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1
Q

What is vitamin B deficiency known as?

A

BERI BERI

Deficiency in Thiamine (Vit B1)

2
Q

List 7 risk factors of vitamin B deficiency

A

Diets consisting of high levels of milled rice + raw freshwater fish
High consumption of tea, coffee + betel nuts
Alcoholic state
Starvation state
Prolonged vomiting
Gastric bypass surgery: limited caloric intake post surgery
Parental nutrition without adequate thiamine supplementation

3
Q

What are the 2 main types of vitamin B deficiency?

A

Dry Beriberi

Wet Beriberi

4
Q

What is wet beri-beri?

A

Thiamine deficiency with CVS involvement
Peripheral vasodilation occurs causing high CO.
Kidneys detect relative loss of volume + therefore conserve salt. Salt retention causes fluid absorption into vessels, hence oedema.
High cardiac workload results in HF with general oedema.

5
Q

What is dry beri-beri?

A

Thiamine deficiency with CNS involvement
Usually occurs with poor caloric intake + physical inactivity
Involves peripheral neuropathy
Wernicke encephalopathy+ Korsakoff syndrome are forms of dry beriberi

6
Q

List 9 early symptoms of vitamin B deficiency

A
Fatigue
Apathy
Irritability
Drowsiness
Depression
Poor concentration
Anorexia
N+V
Abdo pain
7
Q

List 5 later symptoms of wet beri-beri

A
palpitations
SOB
leg swelling
dyspnoea
orthopnea
8
Q

List 4 later symptoms of dry beri-beri

A

numbness of peripheries
confusion
trouble moving legs
pain (cramps)

9
Q

List 10 signs of vitamin B deficiency

A
Tachycardia 
Cardiomegaly  
Pallor + waxy skin  
Signs of malnutrion + wasting  
Hepatomegaly  
Ankle oedema 
Peripheral neuropathy 
Depressed tendon reflexes  
Loss of vibration sensation  
Tender leg muscles
10
Q

How is vitamin B deficiency diagnosed?

A

Primarily clinical: high suspicion with chronic alcohol abuse + special diets/malnutrition

11
Q

What investigations may be performed for vitamin B deficiency?

A

Thiamine loading test (rarely performed): administer thiamine. In deficient there is less excretion of thiamine than in normal patients.
Red cell transketolase activity is decreased (rarely done)
Maybe test blood thiamine level, pyruvate + transketolase level (as the level of these will rise in Wernicke’s encephalopathy)
MRI if Wernicke’s encephalopathy is detected

12
Q

Describe management of vitamin B deficiency

A

Thiamine (Pabrinex) IV: admin slowly over 10 mins
Oral supplementation to continue after IV
If coexisting hypoglycaemia, ensure thiamine given before glucose

13
Q

List 3 complications of vitamin B deficiency

A

Irreversible korsakoff syndrome (chronic memory disorder)
If untreated, HF (which can be fatal)
Anaphalaxis of IV tx

14
Q

What is the prognosis in vitamin B deficiency?

A

Good if treated early, but Korsakoff is minimally reversible

15
Q

Describe the epidemiology of vitamin B deficiency

A

Common in alcoholics

More common in developing countries due to malnutrition

16
Q

List sources of vitamin B

A
Beef
Nuts
Oats
Pork
Egg
Liver
Dried milk
Peas + legumes 
(some foods e.g. rice, pasta, breads + cereals can be fortified with thiamine)