- can present in a variety of forms and follow different patterns
- Symptoms vary depending on whether motor, sensory, or autonomic nerves are damaged
Vitamin B
related Causes
- Heavy Alcohol Consumption
- common cause of peripheral neuropathy
- Damage to the nerves associated with long-term alcohol abuse may not be reversible when a person stops drinking alcohol, however, doing so may provide some symptom relief and prevent further damage.
- frequently leads to nutritional deficiencies (including B12, thiamine, and folate) that contribute to the development of peripheral neuropathy
- Metformin-induced Vitamin B12 Deficiency
- vitamin B12 deficiency with metformin is undoubtedly due to malabsorption of vitamin B12 at its absorption site in the terminal ileum
- Thirty percent of patients on metformin malabsorb vitamin B12
- With an absolute vitamin B12 deficiency, it takes twelve to fifteen years to totally deplete pre-existing vitamin B12 stores
- Proton Pump Inhibitors and Histamine H2 antagonists
- H2RAs and PPIs have been documented to interfere with B-12 absorption
- showing a 53% drop in protein-bound B-12 absorption with H2RA
- Vitamin B12 Deficiency
- can cause serious anemia, nerve damage and degeneration of the spinal cord.
- common for anemia to develop first, but this is not always the case, especially if a person is taking a folate supplement
- lack of B12 damages the myelin sheath that surrounds and protect nerves.
- Without this protection, nerves cease to function properly and conditions such as peripheral neuropathy occur
Benefit
of Supplementation
- Insufficient evidence for benefit of vitamin B supplementation, even when extensively used for PN
- Most treatment guidelines for peripheral neuropathy do not include supplementation as treatment option
- One small trial in alcoholic peripheral neuropathy reported slightly greater improvement in vibration perception threshold with oral benfotiamine for eight weeks than placebo.
- In another small study, a higher dose of oral vitamin B complex for four weeks was more efficacious than a lower dose in reducing symptoms and signs.
- Vitamin B administered by various routes for two to eight weeks was less efficacious than alpha‐lipoic acid, cilostazol or cytidine triphosphate in short‐term improvement of clinical and nerve conduction study outcomes
Recommendations
- Supplementation confer greatest benefit depending on the cause of disease
- do not require high doses if patients do not deficiencies or risks
Condition
|
Choice
of Vitamin B
|
Taking
AntiTB medications
|
B6
|
Alcoholism
|
B1, B12
|
Diabetes,
on Metformin
H2RA
PPI
|
B12
|
Vitamin
|
NEUROBION
|
Individual Tab
|
RDA / for PN
|
B1 /
Thiamine
|
100mg
|
10mg
|
· 5-30mg daily
· Up to 300mg in deficiency
|
B6 /
Pyridoxine
|
200mg
|
10mg
|
· 50-300mg
· 1–6 g oral pyridoxine per day for 12–40 months can cause severe and progressive sensory neuropathy characterized by ataxia (loss of control of bodily movements)
|
B12 /
Cyanocobalamin
|
200mcg
|
500mcg
[mecobalamin]
|
· 50-6000mcg/day
· Bioavailability 25%
|
References:
- http://www.ninds.nih.gov/disorders/peripheralneuropathy/detail_peripheralneuropathy.htm
- http://www.diabetesincontrol.com/metformin-induced-vitamin-b12-deficiency-presenting-as-a-peripheral-neuropathy/\
- http://www.cochrane.org/CD004573/NEUROMUSC_vitamin-b-for-treating-disorders-of-the-peripheral-nerves
- Peripheral Neuropathy and Vitamin B6. University of Virginia.
- http://askdis.blogspot.my/2015/07/maximum-dose-of-neurobion.html
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