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The deoxyuridine suppression test identifies subtle cobalamin deficiency in patients without typical megaloblastic anemia.
JAMA. 1985 Mar 01; 253(9):1284-7.JAMA

Abstract

Four patients had serum cobalamin levels that were initially thought to be falsely low. None of the patients had the typical hematologic and clinical features of cobalamin deficiency and the three so tested had normal cobalamin absorption and/or gastric function. However, the deoxyuridine suppression test result was abnormal in all four cases. The abnormality was improved by adding cobalamin in vitro but, in three of the four cases, was not corrected and, indeed, was made worse by the addition of methyl tetrahydrofolate. These results established metabolically the presence of cobalamin deficiency. The recently improved cobalamin radioassays may be unmasking some atypical and, heretofore, unappreciated cobalamin-deficiency states (only one of our four patients would have come to attention with the older radioassays). These can be identified with the deoxyuridine suppression test, particularly when specific in vitro additives are included.

Authors

No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Case Reports
Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Language

eng

PubMed ID

3968853

Citation

Carmel, R, and D S. Karnaze. "The Deoxyuridine Suppression Test Identifies Subtle Cobalamin Deficiency in Patients Without Typical Megaloblastic Anemia." JAMA, vol. 253, no. 9, 1985, pp. 1284-7.
Carmel R, Karnaze DS. The deoxyuridine suppression test identifies subtle cobalamin deficiency in patients without typical megaloblastic anemia. JAMA. 1985;253(9):1284-7.
Carmel, R., & Karnaze, D. S. (1985). The deoxyuridine suppression test identifies subtle cobalamin deficiency in patients without typical megaloblastic anemia. JAMA, 253(9), 1284-7.
Carmel R, Karnaze DS. The Deoxyuridine Suppression Test Identifies Subtle Cobalamin Deficiency in Patients Without Typical Megaloblastic Anemia. JAMA. 1985 Mar 1;253(9):1284-7. PubMed PMID: 3968853.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - The deoxyuridine suppression test identifies subtle cobalamin deficiency in patients without typical megaloblastic anemia. AU - Carmel,R, AU - Karnaze,D S, PY - 1985/3/1/pubmed PY - 1985/3/1/medline PY - 1985/3/1/entrez SP - 1284 EP - 7 JF - JAMA JO - JAMA VL - 253 IS - 9 N2 - Four patients had serum cobalamin levels that were initially thought to be falsely low. None of the patients had the typical hematologic and clinical features of cobalamin deficiency and the three so tested had normal cobalamin absorption and/or gastric function. However, the deoxyuridine suppression test result was abnormal in all four cases. The abnormality was improved by adding cobalamin in vitro but, in three of the four cases, was not corrected and, indeed, was made worse by the addition of methyl tetrahydrofolate. These results established metabolically the presence of cobalamin deficiency. The recently improved cobalamin radioassays may be unmasking some atypical and, heretofore, unappreciated cobalamin-deficiency states (only one of our four patients would have come to attention with the older radioassays). These can be identified with the deoxyuridine suppression test, particularly when specific in vitro additives are included. SN - 0098-7484 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/3968853/The_deoxyuridine_suppression_test_identifies_subtle_cobalamin_deficiency_in_patients_without_typical_megaloblastic_anemia_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -