Last reviewed: 14 Mar 2025
Last updated: 22 Aug 2023
Summary
Definition
History and exam
Key diagnostic factors
- presence of risk factors
- old age
- history of gastric surgery (gastrectomy, or bypass for obesity)
Other diagnostic factors
- paraesthesias
- vegan and strict vegetarian diet
- chronic gastrointestinal disease (e.g., Crohn's disease or coeliac disease)
- medicine (proton-pump inhibitors, H2 receptor antagonists, metformin, anticonvulsants)
- ataxia
- decreased vibration sense
- positive Romberg's test
- pallor
- petechiae
- glossitis
- angular cheilitis
- cognitive impairment
Risk factors
- age >65 years
- gastric surgery (bypass or resection)
- chronic gastrointestinal (GI) disease
- vegan or strict vegetarian diet
- metformin use
- H2 receptor antagonist or proton-pump inhibitor use
- Helicobacter pylori infection
- anticonvulsant use
- nitrous oxide misuse
- diabetes mellitus
- pregnancy
Diagnostic investigations
Investigations to consider
- methylmalonic acid (MMA)
- homocysteine
- holotranscobalamin (hTC)
- anti-intrinsic factor antibody (anti-IFAB)
- antiparietal cell (APC) antibody
- serum gastrin (fasting)
Treatment algorithm
Contributors
Authors
Robert C. Oh, MD, MPH, CAQSM

Associate Chief of Staff, Education
VA Puget Sound Health Care System
Seattle
WA
Disclosures
RCO declares that he has no competing interests.
Peer reviewers
Thein Hlaing Oo, MD, FRCP Edin, FACP
Professor of Internal Medicine
Consultant Hematologist
The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Houston
TX
Disclosures
THO declares that he has no competing interests.
Rebecca Connor, MD
Chief Fellow
Section of Hematology and Oncology
Department of Internal Medicine
Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center
Winston-Salem
NC
Disclosures
RC declares that she has no competing interests.
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