mechanisms of vitamin deficiency in chronic alcohol misusers and
Transcription
mechanisms of vitamin deficiency in chronic alcohol misusers and
Alcohol & Alcoholism Vol. 35, Suppl. 1, pp. 2-7, 2000 MECHANISMS OF VITAMIN DEFICIENCY IN CHRONIC ALCOHOL MISUSERS AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE WERNICKE-KORSAKOFF SYNDROME ALLAN D. THOMSON Department of Gastroenterology, Greenwich District Hospital, London SE10 9HE, UK (Received 21 September 1999) Abstract — The classic signs of vitamin deficiency only occur in states of extreme depletion and are unreliable indicators for early treatment or prophylaxis of alcoholic patients at risk. Post-mortem findings demonstrate that thiamine (vitamin Bj) deficiency sufficient to cause irreversible brain damage is not diagnosed ante mortem in 80-90% of these patients. The causes of vitamin deficiency are reviewed with special attention to the inhibition of oral thiamine hydrochloride absorption in man caused by malnutrition present in alcoholic patients or by the direct effects of ethanol on intestinal transport. As the condition of the patient misusing alcohol progresses, damage to brain, liver, gastrointestinal tract, and pancreas continue (with other factors discussed) to further compromise the patient. Decreased intake, malabsorption, reduced storage, and impaired utilization further reduce the chances of unaided recovery. Failure of large oral doses of thiamine hydrochloride to provide an effective treatment for Wernicke's encephalopathy emphasizes the need for adequate and rapid replacement of depleted brain thiamine levels by repeated parenteral therapy in adequate doses. INTRODUCTION THE DEVELOPMENT OF THIAMINE DEFICIENCY Thiamine (vitamin B ; ) deficiency classically leads to beriberi, which was first recognized as long ago as 2600 BC, although the cause was not identified until the twentieth century. Thiamine was one of the first vitamins to be identified, its structure having been published by Williams (1936). Early symptoms of thiamine depletion include fatigue, weakness, and emotional disturbance, which occur before other physical features. Prolonged gradual deficiency leads to beriberi with neuropathy, cardiac failure or peripheral oedema. If thiamine deficiency is more acute and severe, the individual develops instead a picture of Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE). © 2000 Medical Council on Alcoholism Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 Occasionally, patients with the classic signs of vitamin deficiency are seen. These patients are, however, grossly deprived and are at the end of a long road of increasing vitamin depletion. Although there is much evidence to the contrary, vitamin deficiency is often wrongly perceived as being uncommon among alcohol misusers, perhaps because the physical signs are not specific and few laboratory tests are readily available which accurately reflect their supply and utilization at the cellular level. Indeed, the findings of Harper et al. (1986) clearly show that thiamine (vitamin B,) deficiency, sufficient to cause irreversible brain damage, was usually not suspected ante mortem. Equally, there is no consensus among psychiatrists and accident and emergency physicians in the UK, who are frequently responsible for treating alcohol misusers, as to which vitamins might be beneficial nor for the best method of administering vitamin B replacement (Hope et ah, 1999). This paper concentrates mainly on thiamine deficiency, but many of the contributory factors creating this state are common to other vitamins. The problems of absorption of thiamine hydrochloride are reviewed and the best way to provide the brain with an adequate continuous supply of thiamine is considered. This most frequently occurs when overwhelming demands are made on thiamine reserves which are already critically low. WE is classically described as having an acute onset with nystagmus, abducens and conjugate gaze palsies, ataxia of gait, and global confusion. It has become clear in recent years, however, that these classic signs are only present together in approximately 10% of patients and the diagnosis is frequently missed. Evidence now supports the view that Korsakoff 's psychosis (KP), characterized by amnesic defects, results from inadequate treatment of WE. The fact, however, that one rarely sees the full blown syndrome in thiamine deficiency alone suggests that the neurotoxic effects of alcohol may also play a part, although the response to prolonged thiamine therapy has been shown to be beneficial. For further discussion of the relationship between WE, KP, and beriberi, the reader is referred to the discussion by Lishman (1998). Because of the close relationship between WE and KP, reference is often made to the Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome (WKS) as though it were a single condition. Whereas inadequate intake is the main cause of thiamine deficiency in underdeveloped countries, in most developed countries of the world there is a close relationship between alcoholism and WKS, alcoholism accounting for more than 95% of the cases. There are, however, other causes of thiamine deficiency seen in areas of poverty and disease such as the inner cities. Here, for example, teenage mothers who are still themselves growing are sometimes further depleted by poor nutrition and drug abuse. Occasionally, there are problems with patients receiving long-term parenteral therapy, people on starvation diets, following gastrectomy and stapling, neglect in old age or in association with AIDS. WKS has been described in association with carcinoma of the stomach, toxaemia of pregnancy, pernicious anaemia, and anorexia nervosa. Other causes have included renal dialysis and it has occurred following severe malnutrition in a schizophrenic patient. Frequently, malnutrition will follow the outbreak of war when food supplies are disrupted or prisoners have had imposed malnutrition. Thiamine depletion occurs within 2 to 3 weeks and may give rise to WKS which may occur without the individual presenting for medical care. Studies by Baker et al. in the 1960s VITAMIN DEFICIENCY IN ALCOHOLISM Patients who misuse alcohol frequently choose to drink alcoholic beverages which contain little thiamine instead of eating a good mixed diet. As their condition deteriorates, alcohol may virtually replace any other source of nutrition for long periods of time. This problem is compounded by the fact that beer and wine contain carbohydrate which will require additional thiamine for its metabolism. Vomiting due to gastritis and diarrhoea often further reduce the thiamine available for absorption from the intestine. A test has been developed using [35S]-thiamine hydrochloride to measure absorption of this vitamin in man. The basis of the test is that radioactive thiamine is given by mouth together with a simultaneously administered non-radioactive i.v. flushing dose. After many experiments, the test conditions have been established, so that the amount of radioactivity appearing in the urine is a fairly accurate measurement of the amount of thiamine originally absorbed (Thomson, 1969). In normal subjects, it has been found that as the size of the oral dose is increased, a plateau is reached such that giving more thiamine does not produce any greater absorption than approximately 4.5 mg, however large the oral dose has been (Fig. 1). Thiamine absorption depends on an active energy-dependent transport mechanism, which obeys Michaelis-Menton kinetics, and there is no evidence in man of the absorption by simple diffusion which has been observed in rats. Further experiments showed that giving ethanol by mouth or i.v. significantly reduced thiamine hydrochloride absorption (Fig. 2). It caused a 70% reduction in expected serum radioactivity and a 52% reduction in total absorption in 30% of the subjects. Experiments during hepatic vein catheterization showed that the route of thiamine absorption remained 24 6 810 15 20 25 30 Oral dose (mg) 40 50 Fig. 1. Relationship between the dose of radioactive thiamine given orally and the cumulative 72-h urine radioactivity. A 200-mg dose of non-radioactive thiamine hydrochloride was given i.v. with each oral dose. Values are means ± SD (bars). Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 showed that, in animals and in man, blood levels of thiamine fell dramatically after 2 weeks of deprivation. There was an accompanying reduction in liver and muscle stores and enzymes that required thiamine diphosphate as a coenzyme showed impaired function. For example, the activity of transketolase, an enzyme in the pentose phosphate pathway for carbohydrate metabolism, dropped significantly after 2 weeks, thereby demonstrating progression of the malnourished state from low circulating thiamine levels to a biochemical lesion. After one or more such episodes of WE, the patient may go on to the chronic syndrome which may or may not have the amnestic features of KP. It has also been suggested that either chronic WE or KP may result from subclinical episodes of thiamine deficiency (Lishman, 1981). Studies in 4684 prisoners of war in the Far East during the Second World War found that vitamin deficiencies were usually multiple and that 679 prisoners showed evidence of thiamine deficiency. WE appeared in this group when acute and severe thiamine depletion was superimposed on partial depletion, for example the stress of intercurrent illness, such as typhoid fever, developing in an already compromised prisoner or if they were given a large glucose/carbohydrate load which requires thiamine for its metabolism (Gibberd and Simmonds, 1980). In industrialized countries, alcoholism has been associated with reduced thiamine circulating levels in 30-80% of patients. Similarly to the prisoners of war, these patients frequently had multiple vitamin deficiencies. Low levels of folic acid have been shown in 60-80%, pyridoxine (vitamin B6) in 50% (Thomson et ah, 1987), and riboflavin (vitamin B9) in 17% (Thomson et ah, 1996); nicotinic acid deficiency being less common. Baker and Frank (1968) and Leevy et al. (1965) in their pioneering work on vitamin deficiencies in alcoholic patients developed many assays to measure circulating vitamin levels in man, including one for thiamine using a highly sensitive and specific protozoan called Ochromonas danica, which has mammalian like requirements for thiamine. More recently, solid phase chromatography, electrophoresis, and high-performance liquid chromatography have been used to measure the very low levels of thiamine in the blood and other tissues. Similarly, measuring the activity of transketolase, the enzyme previously mentioned involved in carbohydrate metabolism, catalysing the transfer of a two-carbon fragment from a ketose to the aldehydic carbon of the aldose in the pentose monophosphate shunt. The interpretation of the results, however, is more complex than was initially thought. These tests are not routinely available in clinical practice. The daily requirement for thiamine is approximately 1.5 mg, but the whole body stores are only between 30 and 50 mg with 2-4 mg being present in the liver. Thiamine requirements are related to energy metabolism and energy intake. These observations are consistent with Baker's findings and explain why a deficient diet will, therefore, deplete the stores in approximately 20-25 days. Thiamine is available in meat products, especially pork and liver, vegetables, milk, legumes, fruits, and to a lesser extent eggs. Thiamine hydrochloride has been added to flour in the USA since the 1930s. In the UK, it has been added since the 1940s but in Australia, in the form of thiamine mononitrate, only since 1991. As discussed below, these may not be the best molecular forms of thiamine to overcome the malabsorption seen in alcoholic patients. A. D. THOMSON Before treatment After treatment 40 60 60 80 100 Minutes 120 140 160 180 LSSSSSN Before Ethanol i = ] After Ethanol 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 Minutes Before treatment After treatment B 50 30 S 10 12 Hours 12 24 Hours Fig. 3. Radioactivity in serum and urine after administration of 5.0 mg of radioactive thiamine orally to 12 malnourished alcoholic patients before and after treatment. A 200-mg dose of non-radioactive thiamine was given i.v. along with the radioactive thiamine dose. Values are means ± SD (bars). unchanged. The inhibitory effects of ethanol on thiamine hydrochloride absorption have subsequently been confirmed in animal experiments and in man (Thomson and Pratt, 1992; Thomson et al, 1996). In another group of malnourished alcoholic patients, there was marked inhibition of thiamine absorption even in the absence of alcohol (Fig. 3). The serum levels of radioactivity were from 30-98% less than the lower level established for normal subjects. Portal and hepatic vein levels were reduced to the same extent. Total absorption was reduced to 13.9 ± 3% of the 5-mg orally administered dose, compared to 35.3 ± 2.2% in the control subjects. Additional flushing doses confirmed that this reduction was due to reduced absorption, which was verified by portal and hepatic vein measurements. There was a wide variation in the degree of malabsorption with some patients absorbing virtually no thiamine. Absorption did not return to normal until the patients had been given a high protein-high vitamin diet for approximately 6 weeks (Fig. 3). The effects of malnutrition and alcohol seem to be additive and explain why some subjects become so thiamine depleted. As seen in Fig. 4, there are multiple causes for thiamine deficiency starting with inadequate intake, increased loss from vomiting, diarrhoea or increased urinary excretion in subjects with an increased need for this vitamin. Alcohol or malnutrition may reduce the absorption of thiamine. Storage in the liver is impaired by liver damage. In addition, damage to the protein part of the enzymes may interfere with the utilization of thiamine. CHANGED NUTRITIONAL REQUIREMENTS WITH INCREASING LIVER DAMAGE Progressive alcoholic liver damage is primarily dependent upon the quantity of alcohol consumed, perhaps with a threshold of 60-80 g of alcohol taken daily for 10 to 12 years for injury to be initiated. Other factors are also important, such as gender, genetics, dietary habits, and nutritional status (McCullough and O'Conner, 1998). For example, the incidence of cirrhosis is lower than expected in countries with a high saturated fat intake and obesity is an independent risk factor. However, hepatitis C infection, which is increased in alcohol misusers, combines to predispose the patient to more advanced liver injury than is caused by alcohol alone (McCullough and O'Conner, 1998). Increasing liver damage not only reduces the capacity to store vitamins, but brings about marked metabolic changes which impose more demands on the already depleted nutrient supply (Thomson and Pratt, 1992). Contrary to previous belief, recent studies of patients with cirrhosis due to ethanol or other causes have demonstrated that their protein requirements are increased (Seymour and Whelan, 1999) and that aggressive enteral nutrition accelerates improvement often without Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 Fig. 2. Radioactivity in serum and urine after administration of 5.0 rag of radioactive thiamine orally to three healthy subjects with and without prior administration of ethanol. A 200-mg dose of non-radioactive thiamine was given i.v. along with the oral dose. When administered, ethanol was given at a dose of 1.5 g/kg. Values are means ± SD (bars). VITAMIN DEFICIENCY IN ALCOHOLISM Impaired utilization impaired appetite, economic factors A +B C +D blocked? apoenzyme + = enzyme coenzyme \ Jp- y hepatic storage v release from •^necrotic cells inadequate diet vomiting diarrhoea steatorrhoea Reduced absorption 4- fats 4- lactose 4- thiamine 4- NaCI+H?O 4- methionine folic acid 4vitsA,K,E&D glucose t iron Urinary excretion Mg t thiamine K Zn need DNA/RNA synthesis and liver regeneration reduced absorption Y ethanol • metabolic demands Fig. 4. Mechanisms of nutritional deficiency in alcoholism. Reproduced here from Thomson et al. (1980), with kind permission of the publishers Ellis Horwood. causing deterioration in the hepatic encephalopathy (Kearns et al., 1992). Protein-energy malnutrition may occur in 20-60% of patients with cirrhosis and is dependent upon the degree of liver damage (Italian Multicentre Cooperative Project, 1994). Other positive factors in protein-calorie malnutrition include nausea, anorexia, and the development of a hypermetabolic state (Seymour and Whelan, 1999). Other studies suggest that there is increased lipid utilization and insulin resistance causing diabetes. These metabolic defects exacerbate the degree of malnutrition and emphasize the need for adequate replacement, including vitamins and minerals (Greco et al., 1998). In 1997, the European Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition published guidelines recommending protein intakes of 1-1.5 g/kg (Plauth et al, 1997) with 30-40 kcal/kg/day, and similar guidelines have been suggested in the USA (McCullough and Bugianesi, 1997). Micronutrients should be supplemented routinely, since deficiency may occur in 10-50% of patients (Kondrup and Miiller, 1997). Improved nutrition has been shown to increase survival, surgical outcome, and liver function (McCullough and Bugianesi, 1997). SUPPLEMENTATION AND PREVENTION OF WKS As previously mentioned, bread was not supplemented with thiamine mononitrate in Australia until 1991. This measure was taken as part of a concerted effort to deal with the high incidence of WKS in Australia. Since then, there has been evidence of a significant fall in the incidence of this disease. This suggests that some alcohol misusers may be able to benefit from this supplementation to a limited extent, but, during a similar period, there has been a reported increase in the incidence of KP in Glasgow where the bread has been supplemented for many years. In Australia, where there have been fewer acute cases of WE, there has also been an improvement in management and education programmes as well as an overall reduction in alcohol consumption which may be equally important in preventing WKS. There has been an interest for some time in adding thiamine to beer. This would have the advantage of increasing thiamine intake as more beer is drunk. However, there remains the unanswered question of how common and to what degree Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 "EMPTY CALORIES" A. D. THOMSON inhibition of thiamine absorption by alcohol is in the 'at risk' and malnourished population. This requires more study. In addition, vitamin deficiencies are usually multiple, including vitamin B6 and niacin which are also required for brain function, not to mention the importance of protein intake and minerals. THIAMINE DEPLETION IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF WE The clinician treating a patient with WE has a window of opportunity when an adequate supply of thiamine to the brain can reverse the 'biochemical lesion' and limit the permanent damage which will otherwise result. This depends on making the correct diagnosis as soon as possible as has been discussed by Cook elsewhere in this issue (Cook, 2000). It also depends upon bypassing the intestinal block to absorption, since little thiamine will be absorbed even from recurrent large oral doses of thiamine hydrochloride or thiamine mononitrate. It is important in this respect to recognize that parenteral doses of 1-500 mg of thiamine are generally well tolerated and toxic effects have been ascribed to rare allergic reactions. Thiamine transport across the blood-brain barrier is by an active rate-limited process, which occurs at a maximum rate of 0.3 p.g/h/g of brain tissue. This is equivalent to the level of brain thiamine turnover, suggesting that thiamine transport is only just sufficient to meet cerebral needs under normal circumstances. At higher blood concentrations thiamine is transported by passive diffusion, and therefore a high plasma: CNS concentration gradient, which is achieved by parenteral therapy, will ensure rapid correction of brain thiamine levels. There have been a number of published studies comparing parenteral vs oral thiamine therapy in chronic alcoholics (Cook et al, 1998). Thomson (1969) and Thomson et al. (1983) demonstrated that giving 50 mg of thiamine hydrochloride orally had little effect on the CNS or blood vitamin levels and did not cause any clinical improvement in patients with WE. Experiments using [35S]-thiamine hydrochloride have shown that thiamine serum levels fall to 20% of their peak value within 2 h of parenteral administration (Thomson, 1969) (see Fig. 5). The accumulated evidence suggests that large parenteral doses are required which far exceed the total body stores of thiamine. This may reflect the need of damaged enzymes for increased supplies of thiamine, or be due to other (b) 80 2 o X /ml 1> 60 b O I CD C E CO £ 40 CO co ID CO scu lar 1 (5 I2 2 0 Fig. 5. Radioactivity in serum and urine after (a) i.v. administration, (b) i.m. administration of a 200-mg dose of [35S] thiamine hydrochloride. Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 The most serious consequence of thiamine deficiency is damage to the central nervous system (CNS) causing WKS. This is characterized by periventricular lesions including the mamillary bodies, other hypothalamic structures, periventricular thalamic nuclei, and the structures from the floor of the fourth ventricle (Thomson and Pratt, 1992). Thiamine diphosphate (TDP) acts as a coenzyme to a number of intra-mitochondrial enzymes involved in carbohydrate and lipid metabolism. TDP, as previously stated, is a cofactor of the enzyme transketolase, which catalyses an important step in the pentose phosphate pathway of carbohydrate metabolism, being a major source of pentoses for nucleic acid synthesis and of NADPH for fatty acid synthesis (lipogenesis). There is also evidence that thiamine triphosphate acts on ion channels in the brain and nerve cell transmission. The brain of a 70-kg man weighs approximately 1.5 kg, but will use 20% of total body oxygen to meet its enormous energy needs. In fact, one-fifth of all food consumed will probably be used to provide energy for the brain. The brain depends almost exclusively on a continuous supply of glucose and 50% of the cerebral thiamine is involved in pyruvate oxidation, therefore directly with energy production. The loss of neurones in the thiamine-deficient brain probably has multiple causes, which include impaired energy metabolism, focal acidosis, loss of transketolase activity, and damage from a regional increase in glutamate (Butterworth et al, 1986; Pratt et al, 1990). IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT VITAMIN DEFICIENCY IN ALCOHOLISM factors which require further study. It does, however, explain why oral treatment in 'alcohol misusers' is frequently inadequate. In order to ensure that the CNS vitamin levels in WE patients are restored, parenteral vitamins should be given three times daily. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS AND COMMENTS REFERENCES Baker, H. and Frank, O. (1968) Clinical Vitaminology. Interscience Publishers, John Wiley, New York. Butterworth, R. F, Giguere, J. F. and Bernard, A. M. (1986) Activities of thiamine-dependent enzymes in two experimental models of thiamine-deficiency encephalopathy. 2a-Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. Neurochemical Research 11, 567-577. Cook, C. C. H. (2000) Prevention and treatment of WernickeKorsakoff syndrome. Alcohol and Alcoholism 35 (Suppl. 1), 19-20. Cook, C. C. H., Hallwood, P. M. and Thomson, A. D. (1998) B-vitamin deficiency and neuropsychiatric syndromes in alcohol misuse. Alcohol and Alcoholism 33, 317-336. Gibberd, F. B. and Simmonds, J. P. (1980) Neurological disease in ex-Far East prisoners of war. Lancet ii, 135-137. Greco, A. V., Mingrone, G., Benedetti, G., Capristo, E., Tataranni, P. A. and Gasbarrini, G. (1998) Daily energy and substrate metabolism in patients with cirrhosis. Hepatology 27, 346-351. Harper, C. G., Giles, M. and Finlay-Jones, R. (1986) Clinical signs in the Wernicke-Korsakoff complex: a retrospective analysis of 131 Downloaded from by guest on October 14, 2016 Vitamin deficiencies, especially thiamine, are frequently present and often unrecognized especially in alcoholic patients. While waiting for the classic signs of vitamin deficiency to develop, these patients will have been nutritionally depleted for a long period of time. The absorption of thiamine hydrochloride is limited in normal subjects, because of the nature of the absorption process in man, and although the pattern of absorption remains the same in patients who are either drinking or malnourished, the actual amount that can be absorbed is markedly reduced. Ethanol or malnutrition can independently interfere with the absorption and the combination of both is probably often additive. If patients are going to be treated adequately, then they need to have their brain thiamine deficit replaced as soon as possible, in adequate amounts by the most appropriate route, if irreversible brain damage is to be avoided. In patients with impaired absorption, this means parenteral therapy in repeated doses to maintain a high blood:CNS ratio. Guidelines are discussed elsewhere in this issue but therapy should continue as long as there is evidence of continuing clinical improvement. cases diagnosed at necropsy. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 49, 341-345. Hope, L. C , Cook, C. C. H. and Thomson, A. D. (1999) A survey of the current clinical practice of psychiatrists and accident and emergency specialists in the UK concerning vitamin supplementation for chronic alcohol misusers. Alcohol and Alcoholism 34, 862-867. Italian Multicentre Cooperative Project on Nutrition in Liver Cirrhosis (1994) Nutritional status in cirrhosis. Journal of Hepatology 21, 217-325. 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(1998) Alcoholic liver disease: proposed recommendations for the American College of Gastroenterology. American Journal of Gastroenterology 93, 2022-2036. Plauth, M., Merli, M., Kondrup, J., Weiman, A., Ferenci, P., Muller, M. J. (1997) ESPEN guidelines for nutrition in liver disease and transplantation. Clinical Nutrition 16, 43-55. Pratt, O. E., Rooprai, H. K., Shaw, G. K. and Thomson, A. D. (1990) The genesis of alcoholic brain tissue injury. Alcohol and Alcoholism 25, 217-230. Seymour, C. A. and Whelan, K. (1999) Dietary management of hepatic encephalopathy. British Medical Journal 318, 1364—1365. Thomson, A. D. (1969) Studies of thiamine absorption in man. PhD Thesis, University of Edinburgh. Thomson, A. D. and Pratt, O. E. (1992) Interaction of nutrients and alcohol: absorption, transport, utilisation and metabolism. In Nutrition and Alcohol, Watson, R. R. and Waltz, B. eds, pp. 75-99, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, USA. Thomson, A. D., Rae, S. A. and Majumdar, S. K. (1980) Malnutrition in the alcoholic. In Medical Consequences of Alcohol Abuse, Clark, P. M. and Krika, L. J. eds, p. 103, Ellis Horwood, Chichester. Thomson, A. D., Ryle, P. R. and Shaw, G. K. (1983) Ethanol, thiamine and brain damage. Alcohol and Alcoholism 18, 27-43. Thomson, A. D., Jeyasingham, M., Pratt, O. E. and Shaw, G. K. (1987) Nutrition and alcoholic encephalopathies. Ada Medica Scandinavica Supplementum 717, 55-65. Thomson, A. D., Heap, L. C. and Ward, R. (1996) Alcohol induced malabsorption in the gastrointestinal tract. In Alcohol and the Gastrointestinal Tract, Preedy, V. R. and Watson, R. R. eds, pp. 203218, CRC Press, Boca Raton, FL, USA. Williams, R. R. (1936) Structure of vitamin B,. Journal of the American Chemical Society 58, 1504-1505.
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