Press Release: Brain Decline may not Prevented by Normal Vitamin B12 Levels

Posted on February 26, 2025 by Admin

A recent study published uses a multimodal testing approach to identify associations between B12 levels currently accepted as normal and markers of neurological injury or impairment.

Study

Visual evoked potentials (VEP) offer a more sensitive and non-invasive method to identify early alterations in myelin function in the visual pathway. The current study utilized multifocal VEP (mfVEP) to assess the impact of low B12 on neurologic health.

A total of 231 healthy individuals with a median age of 71 years who were part of the Brain Aging Network for Cognitive Health (BrANCH) at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Memory and Aging Center were included in the study. In addition to B12 measurements, all study participants were tested annually for neurological function, cognitive performance, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to detect signs of inflammation, axonal damage, or amyloid-related disease.

Results

The study cohort had a median blood B12 concentration of 415 pmol/L, with Holo-TC and Holo-HC median values of 93 and 298 pmol/L, respectively. Vitamin B12 levels were stratified into above and below the geometrical mean value of 408 pmol/L.

To this end, low levels of B12, especially Holo-TC, were associated with neurological dysfunction. At low B12 levels, mfVEP was 0.04 slower, thus indicating slower conduction of nerve impulses in the brain.

Lower Holo-TC was inversely correlated with latency, thus demonstrating that inadequate B12 bioavailability was responsible for greater nerve conduction latency. Low vitamin B12 levels were associated with decreased spatial processing speed, which demonstrates that brain dysfunction correlated with reduced total B12 and Holo-TC, but not Holo-HC.

This negative association was dependent on age, perhaps because older people are at a greater risk of low bioavailable B12 or suboptimal cognitive test performance at younger ages.

Increased Holo-HC correlated with serum tau protein and ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) levels. B12 prevents tau fibril formation, which precedes the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) in Alzheimer’s dementia (AD). Thus, high levels of non-bioavailable B12 were predictive of increased neurodegeneration markers.

Low B12 levels were associated with higher WMH volumes, despite all participants having levels within the currently accepted limits of normal. No correlation was observed with total B12; however, lower Holo-TC levels were associated with higher WMH burden.

Conclusion

With low B12 levels, especially bioavailable B12, white matter injury occurs in the spinal cord. The mechanism of injury remains unclear; however, it may be due to high homocysteine levels secondary to B12.

B12 supplementation for hematological symptoms often leads to their resolution; however, this therapeutic approach is typically not effective for reducing neurological symptoms associated with B12 deficiency. Thus, subtle neurologic dysfunction may persist, despite normal blood B12 levels.

Overall, the study findings emphasize the critical need to establish optimal B12 levels and calls for a broader reconsideration of nutritional guidelines.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20250224/Normal-vitamin-B12-levels-may-not-prevent-brain-decline.aspx