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Vitamin B status in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome.

L C Heap, T J Peters, S Wessely
Other Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 1999 36 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Other
Población
critically ill patients
Intervención
Vitamin B status in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. None
Comparador
control group
Resultado primario
oxidative stress markers
Dirección del efecto
Neutral
Riesgo de sesgo
Moderate

Abstract

Some patients with chronic fatigue syndrome say they benefit from taking vitamin supplements. We assessed functional status for the B vitamins pyridoxine, riboflavin and thiamine in 12 vitamin-untreated CFS patients and in 18 healthy controls matched for age and sex. Vitamin-dependent activities--aspartate aminotransferase (AST) for pyridoxine, glutathione reductase (GTR) for riboflavin, transketolase (TK) for thiamine--were measured in erythrocyte haemolysates before and after in-vitro addition of the relevant vitamin. For all three enzymes basal activity (U/g Hb) was lower in CFS patients than in controls: AST 2.84 (SD 0.62) vs 4.61 (1.43), P < 0.001; GTR 6.13 (1.89) vs 7.42 (1.25), P < 0.04; TK 0.50 (0.13) vs 0.60 (0.07), P < 0.04. This was also true of activated values: AST 4.91 (0.54) vs 7.89 (2.11), P < 0.001; GTR 8.29 (1.60) vs 10.0 (1.80), P < 0.001; TK 0.56 (0.19) vs 0.66 (0.08), P < 0.07. The activation ratios, however, did not differ between the groups. These data provide preliminary evidence of reduced functional B vitamin status, particularly of pyridoxine, in CFS patients.

TL;DR

Preliminary evidence is provided of reduced functional B vitamin status, particularly of pyridoxine, in CFS patients, and activation ratios, however, did not differ between the groups.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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