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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 11, 568-573, Copyright © 1962 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc.
1 From the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory and Second and Fourth (Harvard) Medical Services, Boston City Hospital; and the Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; and the Department of Internal Medicine and Gustaf V Research Institute, Karolinska Sjukhuset, Stockholm, Sweden
The absorption of physiologic quantities (1.47 µg.) of liver-bound vitamin B12 was compared with the absorption of free cyanocobalamin (2 µg.) in seven subjects with pernicious anemia. Urinary excretion of radiovitamin B12 was determined in five subjects, hepatic uptake in three subjects, and therapeutic trial in one subject. There was no evidence for preferential absorption of liver-bound vitamin B12. Liver-bound vitamin B12 absorption was enhanced by intrinsic factor, suggesting it becomes free of its liver bond in the intestine.
In vitro studies, using both a liver homogenate and a guinea pig gut homogenate system, also indicated no preferential uptake of liver-bound vitamin B12.
The apparent preferential absorption of liver-bound vitamin B12 in the original study, may be explainable, as considered in the original report, by delayed excretion rather than enhanced absorption of liver-bound vitamin B12, which is in a noncyano form, or to possible increased absorption by diffusion in acute vitamin B12-deficiency of the supraphysiologic quantities of vitamin B12 administered. No such increased absorption by diffusion was demonstrated in the patient undergoing therapeutic trial in the present study, however, using a "physiologic" quantity of liver-bound vitamin B12.
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