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  • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
  • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
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  • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
  • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly


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    Thread: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

    1. #1
      BABY1's Avatar
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      Default Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly



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      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      NaturalNews) Loss of cognition and the ability to form new memories affects the daily lives of an ever increasing number of aging adults. Often, this decline is the first sign of dementia and can lead to more serious illnesses, including Alzheimer's disease. Many forward thinking practitioners and alternative health researchers are finding that suboptimal nutrition status over the course of many years and decades, in combination with exposure to toxic environmental and household chemicals and pollutants directly contribute to brain health deterioration and serious disease.

      A study group from Tufts University in Medford, MAhas published their findings in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society that shows how being mildly vitamin B-12 deficient could be an indication that some older adults are at a greater risk for accelerated cognitive decline. Many aging adults receive minimal amounts of vitamin B-12 from their diet, and have limited ability to metabolize what they do consume. Eating highly processed foods over the course of a lifetime leads to extreme vitamin B-12 deficiency that affects chemical and electrical signaling in the brain.

      Circulating vitamin B-12 levels are associated with cognition and memory in the elderly

      To set up their study, researchers analyzed data from 549 men and women enrolled in the Framingham Heart Study with an average age of 75. Blood samples were drawn and the participants were divided into five groups based on their vitamin B-12 levels. The team administered the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), a short list of questions often used to screen for dementia (five tests given over a period of eight years), to each group member to assess general cognitive status.

      The researchers found that participants in the lowest two groups experienced significantly accelerated cognitive decline. The lead study author, Dr. Martha Morris noted "Rapid neuropsychiatric decline is a well-known consequence of severe vitamin B-12 deficiency, but our findings suggest that adverse cognitive effects of low vitamin B-12 status may affect a much larger proportion of seniors than previously thought." The team found that scores dropped an average of .24 points per year on average, but those in the lowest two-fifths dropped by .35 points each year, a significant decline that is associated with a decline in memory and normal thought processes.

      Dr. Morris concluded "While we emphasize our study does not show causation, our associations raise the concern that some cognitive decline may be the result of inadequate vitamin B-12 in older adults, for whom maintaining normal blood levels can be a challenge." As absorption from food can be an issue for many aging adults, it is best to supplement with the bioactive type of vitamin B-12 known as methylcobalamin, taken in a sublingual form (one to five mg per day) to preserve memory and cognitive function.

      Sources for this article include:

      Mild vitamin B12 deficiency associated with accelerated cognitive decline
      https://psychcentral.com
      https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com

      Learn more: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
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    2. #2
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      Default Re: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

      thank the lord almighty that i just started incorporating b-12 shots on a weekly basis.

    3. #3
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      Default Re: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

      its the first thing an internist checks. if we all live to 114, 100% of us would not absorb b12 due to achlorydia

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      Default Re: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

      Quote Originally Posted by bandaidwoman View Post
      its the first thing an internist checks. if we all live to 114, 100% of us would not absorb b12 due to achlorydia
      Not the internist I have had or my family members even. Will you be my on-line doc please? lol
      Veritas Vos Liberabit

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      Default Re: Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

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      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly

      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      • Vitamin B-12 deficiency signals cognitive decline and dementia risk in elderly
      You can't test it without a code. Anyone with mal-absorption ( Celiac disease or status gastric bypass), it can be checked. Early cognitive impairment in elderly or young, it can be checked. Any signs of macro-cytic anemia, it can be checked. Any sign of poly-neuorapty, it can be checked, any ataxia or posterior spinal column disease, it can be checked. To "screen" for it, we can't. When I do, my patients forget I have told them their insurance won't pay and are pissed at me. Which is probably why lots of docs don't...

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