How to Identify B 12 Deficiency Symptoms
What is B12 Deficiency?
B12 deficiency causing symptoms of anemia, a lack of vitamin B12 can also affect the nerves, and so affect the senses of touch and pain. In adults, blood cells are produced by red bone marrow, which is found inside the centre of the hips, ribs, breastbone and backbone, plus the ends of long bones such as the thigh. Red blood cells live for around 120 days before they are deteriorated and replaced, as part of a normal renewal process.
Vitamin B12 is a important factor in DNA, the chemical that carries genetic information for young cells. It’s located in meat and animal products but not in vegetables. You need vitamin B12 to make red blood cells and for maintaining healthy nerves.
What are the symptoms of B12 deficiency?
The reactions of B12 deficiency (anemia) include:
breathlessness
feeling very tired
dizziness
feeling very cold all the time
a rapid, weak pulse
palpitations
headaches
Persons with vitamin B12-deficiency anemia may also look pale or jaundiced (yellow-tinged skin and eyes). As well as the symptoms of anemia, vitamin B12 deficiency may result in neurological reactions due to inflammation of the nerves (neuritis). This is refer to as vitamin B12 neuropathy. It disturbs movement and sensation, especially in the legs, and causes numbness or pins and needles. It can also result in confusion, depression, poor concentration and forgetfulness.
What are the causes of Vitamin B12 deficiency?
There are numerous different causes of anemia. A deficiency of vitamin B12 in your diet is just one possible cause. Other nutrients that you need to develop red blood cells include iron and folate (folic acid). A shortage of these in the diet can also cause anemia.
Most people who contract vitamin B12-deficiency anemia can’t make enough of a substance called intrinsic factor in their stomach. This intrinsic factor is needed for vitamin B12 to be absorbed from food and drink. This is a condition referred to as pernicious anemia. Pernicious anemia is an autoimmune condition. Normally, antibodies formed by the body’s immune system attack foreign substances such as viruses and bacteria. With autoimmune conditions, the immune system mistakes the person’s own tissue as strange and attacks it instead.
With pernicious anemia, antibodies fight the cells in the stomach that form intrinsic factor. The exact cause of pernicious anemia isn’t known. Its most popular in people aged over 60. It affects women more than men, and is more popular in people with blue eyes, early graying hair and blood group A.