Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Vitamin B1 deficiency can damage your brain

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Sep, 2014 08:32 AM
  • Vitamin B1 deficiency can damage your brain
Include more vitamin B1-rich food in your diet as neurologists have underlined that deficiency of a single vitamin B1 (or thiamine) can cause a potentially fatal brain disorder.
 
The brain disorder called Wernicke encephalopathy typically occurs in people who have disorders such as alcoholism and anorexia that lead to malnourishment.
 
“Wernicke encephalopathy is an example of the wide range of brain diseases called encephalopathies that are caused by metabolic disorders and toxic substances,” said Matthew McCoyd, a neurologist at Loyola University Medical Center in the US.
 
Untreated, the condition can lead to irreversible brain damage and death, the researchers said.
 
Symptoms of the disorder can include confusion, hallucinations, coma, loss of muscle coordination and vision problems such as double vision and involuntary eye movements.
 
"Toxic and metabolic encephalopathies may range in severity from the acute confusional state to frank coma," McCoyd added.
 
Wernicke encephalopathy is a medical emergency that requires immediate thiamine treatment either by injection or IV.
 
"In the absence of treatment, deficiency can lead to irreversible brain damage and death with an estimated mortality of 20 percent," the Loyola neurologists wrote.
 
Vitamin B1 is found in a wide variety of foods including watermelon, cereal grains, oatmeal, potatoes and eggs.
 
The report appeared in the journal Scientific American Medicine.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response

Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response
Researchers have revealed how Ebola virus blocks and disables the body's natural immune response - paving the way for developing a drug to treat...

Decoded: How Ebola virus disables immune response

HIV vaccine a step closer

HIV vaccine a step closer
 Researchers have uncovered new properties of special HIV antibodies called "broadly neutralising antibodies" or BNAbs, a discovery that could shed...

HIV vaccine a step closer

Computer to help spinal cord injury victims walk

Computer to help spinal cord injury victims walk
For helping people with spinal cord injury walk better, researchers have made an artificial connection from the brain to the locomotion centre in the...

Computer to help spinal cord injury victims walk

How immune system triggers psychological disorders

How immune system triggers psychological disorders
People with high levels of "inflammatory marker" proteins released into the blood in response to infection are at greater risk of developing depression and psychosis, says a study....

How immune system triggers psychological disorders

'Love hormone' helps autistic kids

'Love hormone' helps autistic kids
Researchers from Stanford University have found that oxytocin has a tremendous effect on such kids' ability to function socially....

'Love hormone' helps autistic kids

Lead exposure can make you fat

Lead exposure can make you fat
Even at low levels, lead is associated with obesity in mice whose mothers were exposed to the chemical, researchers at University of Michigan have found....

Lead exposure can make you fat