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Prevalence of low serum folate and vitamin B12 in an older Australian population

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posted on 2024-11-14, 21:57 authored by Victoria Flood, Wayne T Smith, Karen L Webb, Elena Rochtchina, Valerie Anderson, Paul Mitchell
Objective: To examine the prevalence of low serum folate and vitamin B12, in association with elevated serum homocysteine, in a representative sample of older Australians. Methods: During 1997-2000, 3,508 persons aged 50+ years were examined in a population-based cohort study conducted in two postcodes, west of Sydney, Australia. Of these, 2,901 participants (82.7%) provided fasting blood for estimates of serum folate, vitamin B12 and total homocysteine. Results: Low serum B12 (<185 pmol>/L) was found in 22.9% of participants and low serum folate (<6.8 nmol/L) in 2.3% of participants. Among those people with very low serum vitamin B12 (<125 pmol/L) and low serum folate, 51% had elevated homocysteine. Conclusions: Low serum levels of vitamin B12 and elevated serum homocysteine are relatively frequent in older Australians. Implications: Appropriate public health action should be considered to reduce the prevalence of low serum vitamin B12 and elevated homocysteine in older Australians.

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Citation

Flood, V. M., Smith, W., Webb, K., Rochtchina, E., Anderson, V. & Mitchell, P. 2006, 'Prevalence of low serum folate and vitamin B12 in an older Australian population', Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health, vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 38-41.

Journal title

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health

Volume

30

Issue

1

Pagination

38-41

Language

English

RIS ID

30336

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