Hutto B R
Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599, USA.
Compr Psychiatry. 1997 Nov-Dec;38(6):305-14. doi: 10.1016/s0010-440x(97)90925-1.
The linkage of cobalamin and folate deficiency to psychiatric illness has been studied and debated since these vitamins were first discovered in the 1940s. The clinical relevance of these deficiencies remains the subject of investigation and scholarly discussion. This article reviews case reports and studies derived from a MEDLINE search for English-language articles related to folate, cobalamin, and psychiatric illness. Emphasis is given to clinical research and recent developments. Preclinical evidence for direct effects of folate and cobalamin on brain functioning is compelling, and numerous associations of their deficiencies to psychiatric illness are evident. These vitamin deficiencies may typically present initially with psychiatric symptoms, but any direct causal relationship to specific neuropsychiatric illnesses are not well defined. The relationship of these vitamins in dementia is significant, but they may only rarely be a cause of truly reversible dementia. Folate deficiency appears most tightly connected with depressive disorders, and cobalamin deficiency with psychosis. Contrary to intuition, vitamin deficiencies appear to occur infrequently with eating disorders. Other diagnoses have been investigated much less extensively. The diagnosis and management of these deficiencies in the context of neuropsychiatric illness is still a matter of discussion. The quality of clinical research in this area is improving, but there are many unanswered questions that affect clinical practice. Clinicians should remain vigilant to the possibility of deficiencies of folate and cobalamin in diverse psychiatric populations. Normal hematological indices do not rule out the deficiencies. Further study is needed to refine the detection and clinical management of these vitamin deficiencies in psychiatric populations.
自20世纪40年代首次发现钴胺素和叶酸以来,它们与精神疾病的关联就一直是研究和争论的焦点。这些缺乏症的临床相关性仍是研究和学术讨论的主题。本文回顾了通过MEDLINE搜索与叶酸、钴胺素和精神疾病相关的英文文章得出的病例报告和研究。重点关注临床研究和最新进展。叶酸和钴胺素对大脑功能有直接影响的临床前证据很有说服力,它们的缺乏与精神疾病的众多关联也很明显。这些维生素缺乏症最初可能通常表现为精神症状,但与特定神经精神疾病的任何直接因果关系尚未明确界定。这些维生素在痴呆症中的关系很重要,但它们很少会是真正可逆性痴呆的病因。叶酸缺乏似乎与抑郁症联系最为紧密,而钴胺素缺乏与精神病联系最为紧密。与直觉相反,维生素缺乏症在饮食失调中似乎很少见。对其他诊断的研究要少得多。在神经精神疾病背景下对这些缺乏症的诊断和管理仍是一个讨论的问题。该领域临床研究的质量正在提高,但仍有许多未解决的问题影响着临床实践。临床医生应始终警惕不同精神疾病人群中叶酸和钴胺素缺乏的可能性。正常的血液学指标并不能排除缺乏症。需要进一步研究以完善精神疾病人群中这些维生素缺乏症的检测和临床管理。