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You are here: Home > Health A to Z > Folate-deficiency anemia



Folate-deficiency anemia

Definition
Expectations (prognosis)
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Complications
Symptoms
Calling your health care provider
Signs and tests
Prevention
Treatment


Megaloblastic anemia - view of red blood cells
Megaloblastic anemia - view of red blood cells
Blood cells
Blood cells

 Definition  

Folate-deficiency anemia is a decrease in red blood cells (anemia) caused by folate deficiency.

 Causes, incidence, and risk factors  

Folate, also called folic acid, is necessary for red blood cell formation and growth. You can get folate by eating from green leafy vegetables and liver. Some medications, such as phenytoin (Dilantin), interfere with the absorption of this vitamin. Because folate is not stored in the body in large amounts, a continual dietary supply of this vitamin is needed.

In folate-deficiency anemia, the red cells are abnormally large and are called megalocytes, or megaloblasts in the bone marrow. Subsequently, this anemia may be referred to as megaloblastic anemia

Causes of this anemia are poor dietary intake of folic acid, malabsorption diseases such as celiac disease (sprue), and certain medications. A relative deficiency due to increased need for folic acid may occur in the third trimester of pregnancy.

Risk factors include poor diet (seen frequently in the poor, the elderly, and in people who do not eat fresh fruits or vegetables), eating overcooked food, alcoholism (which interferes with the absorption of folate), history of malabsorption diseases, and pregnancy. The disease occurs in about 4 out of 100,000 people.

 Symptoms  

  • Tiredness
  • Headache
  • Sore mouth and tongue
  • Pallor

 Signs and tests  

  • Low red blood cell folate level.
  • A complete blood count (CBC) shows anemia and large red blood cells.
  • A bone marrow examination is rarely necessary, but shows megaloblasts.

 Treatment  

The goal is to treat the cause of the anemia, which may be poor diet or a malabsorption disease.

Oral or intravenous folic acid supplements may be taken on a short-term basis until the anemia has been corrected, or -- in the case of poor absorption by the intestine -- replacement therapy may be lifelong.

Dietary treatment consists of increasing the intake of green, leafy vegetables and citrus fruits.

 Expectations (prognosis)  

Anemia usually responds well to treatment within 2 months.

 Complications  

Symptoms of anemia can cause discomfort. In a pregnant woman, folate deficiency has been associated with neural tube or spinal defects (such as spina bifida) in the infant.

 Calling your health care provider  

Call for an appointment with your health care provider if you have symptoms of folate deficiency anemia.

 Prevention  

Good dietary intake of folate in high-risk individuals, and folic acid supplementation during pregnancy, may help prevent the onset of this anemia.

Review date: 10/30/2006

Reviewed By: William Matsui, MD, Assistant Professor of Oncology, Division of Hematologic Malignancies, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, MD. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.

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