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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 20, 636-640, Copyright © 1967 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc.

Effect of Pepsin on the Absorption of Food Vitamin B12 and Iron

STANLEY G. SCHADE 1 and ROBERT F. SCHILLING 1

1 From the Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin

Using eggs from chickens injected with B1257Co and 59Fe, we have studied the effect of in vitro peptic digestion on the absorption of egg vitamin B12 and iron in 10 patients with pernicious anemia and 8 patients with acid gastric juice. The eggs were fed with neutralized normal human gastric juice, and absorption of the B12 and iron measured by assay of fecal radioactivity. The mean of B12 excretion in pernicious anemia patients fed pepsinized eggs was 76% compared to 81% in the same patients fed nonpepsinized eggs. This difference was significant only at the 0.15 level of probability. Patients with acid gastric juice excreted 61% of the fed egg B12 and this was significantly lower than either value obtained in the pernicious anemia patients. In vitro peptic digestion did not affect iron absorption, and the patients with acid gastric juice did not absorb egg iron better than pernicious anemia patients. We suggest that peptic activity is important in food B12 absorption.







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Copyright © 1967 by The American Society for Nutrition