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1.
J Med Biogr ; 26(1): 49-59, 2018 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27342698

ABSTRACT

Harry Hopkins was the most important nontitled allied leader in World War II. He was the advisor to President Roosevelt who managed the diplomacy between Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin from 1941 to 1946. Throughout these times, Hopkins was ill and required transfusions, admissions to the hospital, and nutritional supplementation to keep him well enough to travel the world and manage the allied war diplomacy. There has been no unifying theory to account for all his symptoms and his reported pathologic and autopsy findings. In this paper, we will review his political and medical history and a differential diagnosis of his illness.


Subject(s)
Famous Persons , Fibrosis/history , Hepatitis, Viral, Human/history , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history , Diagnosis, Differential , Fibrosis/diagnosis , Fibrosis/etiology , Fibrosis/virology , Hepatitis, Viral, Human/diagnosis , Hepatitis, Viral, Human/virology , History, 20th Century , Politics , United States , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/diagnosis , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/etiology
2.
Perspect Biol Med ; 58(4): 419-43, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27397049

ABSTRACT

To date, no single diagnosis has unified the psychiatric illness and the numerous poorly defined physical complaints that Mary Lincoln (née Todd, 1818-1882) suffered in adulthood. Here, I show that her physical ailments spanned 30 years and included sore mouth, pallor, paresthesias, the Lhermitte symptom, fever, headaches, fatigue, resting tachycardia, edema, episodic weight loss, progressive weakness, ataxia, and visual impairment. Long thought hypochondriacal, these findings, plus their time course and her psychopathology (irritability, delusions, hallucinations, with preserved clarity), are all consistent with vitamin B12 deficiency. Pernicious anemia most probably caused this deficiency: she lacked risk factors for other causes, and her consanguineous parents both derived from a region of Scotland having a high incidence of pernicious anemia. A diagnosis of chronic multisystem pernicious anemia would clarify the conduct of Mary Lincoln as First Lady and widow, and illuminate challenges faced by her husband, President Abraham Lincoln. Her case highlights many forgotten features of the natural history of untreated pernicious anemia and is unique in the medical literature in demonstrating such a course extending over a lifetime.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Pernicious/complications , Anemia, Pernicious/physiopathology , Famous Persons , Mental Disorders/etiology , Anemia, Pernicious/history , Female , History, 19th Century , Humans , Mental Disorders/history , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/complications , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history
3.
Orv Hetil ; 154(44): 1754-8, 2013 Nov 03.
Article in Hungarian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24161600

ABSTRACT

Increased blood cell regeneration in exsanguinated experimental animals treated either with liver or with aqueous liver extracts was reported by Whipple and by Jeney and Jobling, respectively. These findings stimulated Minot and Murphy to provide evidence for the efficacy of liver against anaemia in clinical studies. After oral administration of liver (45-50 g per day) for 45 patients with anaemia perniciosa improvement of the hematological status was demonstrated. Consequently, for proving the therapeutic value of liver therapy Whipple, Minot and Murphy received Nobel price in 1934. The isolation of the antianemic factor from the liver has been succeeded in 1948 and designated as vitamin B12. At the same time Lucy Wills applied yeast for the treatment of pregnant women with anemia related to undernourishment. The conclusions of this study inspired the discovery of folate. The detailed investigation of the mode of action of vitamin B12 and folate enriched our knowledge in the area of pathophysiology and extended the clinical application of these two drugs.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Pernicious/history , Folic Acid/history , Vitamin B 12/history , Anemia, Pernicious/drug therapy , Anemia, Pernicious/metabolism , Antineoplastic Agents/history , Autoimmunity , Folic Acid/therapeutic use , Folic Acid Antagonists/history , Folic Acid Deficiency/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Vitamin B 12/therapeutic use , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history
5.
Pract Neurol ; 9(1): 37-41, 2009 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19151237

ABSTRACT

We describe a case of functional vitamin B12 deficiency where the repeated measurement of a serum B12 level within the normal range led to delay in the diagnosis of subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord, and possibly permanent neurological damage as a result. Failure of intracellular transport of B12 by transcobalamin-2 can lead to functional B12 deficiency but with apparently normal serum levels, and is suggested by raised levels of either serum methylmalonic acid or homocysteine, associated with low levels of transcobalamin-2. Such patients may respond to repeated high-dose injections of B12.


Subject(s)
Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/physiopathology , Aged , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Portraits as Topic , Vitamin B 12/chemistry , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/pathology
6.
Med Secoli ; 19(1): 9-18, 2007.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18447164

ABSTRACT

Subacute combined degeneration (SCD) is considered the neurological counterpart of pernicious anaemia because it is the paradigmatic neurological manifestation of acquired vitamin B12 (cobalamin (Cbl)) deficiency in adulthood. Hitherto, the theories advanced to explain the pathogenesis of SCD have postulated a causal relationship between SCD lesions and the impairment of either or both of two Cbl-dependent reactions. We have identified a new experimental model, the totally gastrectomised (TGX) rat, to reproduce the key morphological features of the disease, and found new mechanisms responsible for the pathogenesis of SCD. We have demonstrated that the neuropathological lesions in TGX rats are not only due to mere vitamin withdrawal but also to the overproduction of the myelinolytic tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, nerve growth factor, the soluble(s) CD40:sCD40 ligand dyad, and the reduced synthesis of the neurotrophic agents, epidermal growth factor and interleukin-6. Cbl replacement treatments normalised all of these abnormalities.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Pernicious/etiology , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/complications , Anemia, Pernicious/history , Animals , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , London , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history
7.
Clin Lab Haematol ; 28(1): 50-6, 2006 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16430460

ABSTRACT

With the introduction of automated assays for measuring serum cobalamin levels over the last decades, the hematological manifestations related to cobalamin deficiency have been changed from the description reported in 'old' studies or textbooks. We studied the hematological manifestations or abnormalities in 201 patients (median age: 67 +/- 6 years) with well-documented cobalamin deficiency (mean serum vitamin B12 levels 125 +/- 47 pg/ml) extracted from an observational cohort study (1995-2003). Assessment included clinical features, blood count and morphological review. Hematological abnormalities were reported in at least two-third of the patients: anemia (37%), leukopenia (13.9%), thrombopenia (9.9%), macrocytosis (54%) and hypegmented neutrophils (32%). The mean hemoglobin level was 10.3 +/- 0.4 g/dl and the mean erythrocyte cell volume 98.9 +/- 25.6 fl. Approximately 10% of the patients have life-threatening hematological manifestations with documented symptomatic pancytopenia (5%), 'pseudo' thrombotic microangiopathy (Moschkowitz; 2.5%), severe anemia (defined as Hb levels <6 g/dl; 2.5%) and hemolytic anemia (1.5%). Correction of the hematological abnormalities was achieved in at least two-thirds of the patients, equally well in patients treated with either intramuscular or oral crystalline cyanocobalamin. This study, based on real data from a single institution with a large number of consecutive patients with well-documented cobalamin deficiency, confirms several 'older' findings that were previously reported before the 1990s in several studies and in textbooks.


Subject(s)
Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/blood , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cell Size , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Hematologic Diseases/blood , Hematologic Diseases/complications , Hematologic Diseases/drug therapy , Hematologic Diseases/history , Hematologic Diseases/pathology , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies , Vitamin B 12/administration & dosage , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/complications , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/drug therapy , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/pathology , Vitamin B Complex/administration & dosage
11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7701243

ABSTRACT

Cobalamin deficiency must be suspected in all patients with unexplained neuropsychiatric symptoms or unexplained anemia. Special attention should be paid to patients at risk of developing cobalamin deficiency such as elderly people, vegetarians, HIV-infected patients, patients with gastrointestinal diseases and patients with autoimmunity or a family history of pernicious anemia. The assays aimed to answer the question: does this patient suffer from cobalamin deficiency, include analysis of P--cobalamins and analyses of the metabolites that accumulate upon cellular cobalamin deficiency, P--methylmalonate and P--homocysteine. P--cobalamins or especially a fraction of P--cobalamins, P--TC cobalamins are markers for latent cobalamin deficiency. An increased concentration of P--methylmalonate that decreases upon injection of cobalamin indicates overt metabolic cobalamin deficiency. The same holds for P--homocysteine but this analysis is less specific than P--methylmalonate. We suggest that either assay of P--cobalamins or P--methylmalonate is employed as screening test for cobalamin deficiency, and that further tests are performed only if the initial test in combination with the clinical picture gives an unclear answer. Once cobalamin deficiency has been diagnosed, the cause for the deficiency should be sought and the patient should be treated for life. Cobalamin absorption tests such as the Schilling test are considered of limited use. Gastric atrophy is likely to be present in patients with increased P--gastrin or decreased P--pepsinogen A. However, this condition can be diagnosed also by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy.


Subject(s)
Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/diagnosis , Gastrins/blood , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Homocysteine/blood , Humans , Methylmalonic Acid/blood , Pepsinogens/blood , Schilling Test , Vitamin B 12/blood , Vitamin B 12/metabolism , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/etiology , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history
12.
Med Hypotheses ; 27(3): 231-40, 1988 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3062338

ABSTRACT

When James D. Duke died in 1925, he had left $19 million to build Duke University. He died from pernicious anemia, a vitamin B-12 deficiency. The author gives evidence that Duke made his gift when he was brain damaged and depressed from a vitamin B-12 deficiency, that he donated the money in an attempt to relieve guilt feelings.


Subject(s)
Depression/history , Universities/history , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/history , Aged , Anemia, Pernicious/history , Anemia, Pernicious/psychology , Depression/etiology , Depression/genetics , Famous Persons , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Models, Psychological , North Carolina , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/complications , Vitamin B 12 Deficiency/genetics
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