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Folate and B12 may
influence cognition in seniors
Boston — Folate and vitamin B12, two important nutrients for
the development of healthy nerves and blood cells,
may work together to protect cognitive function
among seniors, reports a new epidemiological study
from the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts University (USDA HNRCA).
According to Martha Savaria Morris, PhD, epidemiologist at
the USDA HNRCA, "we found a strong relationship
between high folate status and good cognitive
function among people 60 and older who also had
adequate levels of vitamin B12."
The study, published in the January 2007 issue of the
American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, also
determined that low vitamin B12 status was
associated with increased cognitive impairment.
Using data collected from the National Health and Nutrition
Examination Survey (NHANES) between 1999 and 2002,
Morris and colleagues found that people with normal
vitamin B12 status and high serum folate, which is a
measure of folate in the blood, had higher scores on
a test of cognitive function.
Blood tests were used to determine folate and vitamin B12
levels, and the cognitive function test assessed
aptitudes such as response speed, sustained
attention, visual spatial skills, associative
learning, and memory.
Cognitive impairment was identified when a subject fell into
the bottom 20th percentile of the distribution on
the test.
"People with normal vitamin B12 status performed better if
their serum folate was high," explains Morris,
corresponding author of the study.
"But for people with low vitamin B12 status, high serum
folate was associated with poor performance on the
cognitive test."
Seniors with low vitamin B12 status and high serum folate
were also significantly more likely than seniors in
other categories to have anemia, a condition caused
by reduced amounts of hemoglobin in oxygen-carrying
red blood cells, or by a deficiency in the number or
volume of such cells.
"For seniors, low vitamin B12 status and high serum folate
was the worst combination," says Morris.
"Specifically, anemia and cognitive impairment were observed
nearly five times as often for people with this
combination than among people with normal vitamin
B12 and normal folate."
Vitamin B12 deficiency, which affects many seniors due to
age-related decreases in absorption, can impact the
production of DNA needed for new cells, as well as
neurological function.
Vitamin B12 is normally consumed in meat, fish, poultry,
eggs, and dairy products, and folate is found in
leafy green vegetables, citrus fruits, and beans.
Although folate occurs naturally in many foods, the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration in 1998 required that all
enriched cereal-grain products be fortified with
folic acid, the synthetic form of folate, in order
to help prevent birth defects in infants.
Morris notes that the study's results are inconsistent with
the idea that high folate status delays detection of
vitamin B12 by masking one of its key signs: anemia.
"When folate fortification was considered, opponents raised
the possibility that because more folate might mask
anemia, many cases of vitamin B12 deficiency would
go undetected, causing people with the condition to
suffer neuropsychiatric consequences.
But in our study, the people with low vitamin B12 who also
had high serum folate were more likely to exhibit
anemia and cognitive impairment than subjects with
low vitamin B12 status and normal serum folate.
So although having high serum folate had an impact on
cognitive function in our study, it did not cure
anemia, as opponents of food fortification have
suggested."
Senior author Jacob Selhub, PhD, director of the Vitamin
Metabolism Laboratory at the USDA HNRCA and
professor at the Friedman School, says, "Our
findings support the often-expressed idea that many
seniors would benefit from more folate, but the
research shows that we must look at the effects this
would have on seniors with age-related vitamin B12
deficiency, who may be more numerous than once
realized. There are also indications that too much
folic acid and too little B12 is a general
phenomenon that affects other systems in the body,
and might be a factor in some other diseases."
As with any epidemiological study, Morris cautions that the
results show association and not causation. She also
notes that because the study only measured levels of
total folate in the blood, it is uncertain whether
the results were due to unmetabolized folic acid in
the body.
"We encourage further studies of these relationships and
their underlying mechanisms," write Morris and her
colleagues at Tufts. "We hope our findings both
inform the continuing debate about folic acid
fortification and influence future efforts to detect
and treat low vitamin B12 status among seniors."
###
Morris MS, Jacques PF, Rosenberg IH, Selhub J. American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2007 (January);
85:193-200. "Folate and vitamin B-12 status in
relation to anemia, macrocytosis, and cognitive
impairment in older Americans in the age of folic
acid fortification."
If you are interested in learning more about these topics, or
speaking with a faculty member at the Friedman
School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts
University, or another Tufts health sciences
researcher, please contact Siobhan Gallagher at
617-636-6586.
The Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition
Science and Policy at Tufts University is the only
independent school of nutrition in the United
States.
The school's eight centers, which focus on questions relating
to famine, hunger, poverty, and communications, are
renowned for the application of scientific research
to national and international policy.
For two decades, the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research
Center on Aging at Tufts University has studied the
relationship between good nutrition and good health
in aging populations. Tufts research scientists work
with federal agencies to establish the USDA Dietary
Guidelines, the Dietary Reference Intakes, and other
significant public policies.