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Beriberi Info
What is Beriberi?
Beriberi is a vitamin deficiency disease caused by inadequate
bodily stores of thiamine (vitamin B-1). It can damage the
heart and nervous system.
Alternative Names:
Thiamine deficiency; Vitamin B1 deficiency
Causes, incidence, and risk factors:
There are two major manifestations of thiamine deficiency:
cardiovascular disease (wet beriberi) and nervous system
disease ("dry beriberi" and Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome). Dry
beriberi is somewhat of a misnomer because both types are most
often caused by excessive alcohol consumption.
Symptoms of dry beriberi include pain, tingling, or loss of
sensation in hands and feet (peripheral neuropathy), muscle
wasting with loss of function or paralysis of the lower
extremities, and potentially brain damage and death.
Wet beriberi is characterized by swelling (edema), increased
heart rate (tachycardia), lung congestion, and enlarged heart
related to congestive heart failure.
Beriberi has become very rare in the United States because
most foods are now vitamin-enriched, which means that a normal
diet contains adequate amounts of thiamine.
As a result, beriberi now occurs primarily in patients who
abuse alcohol, because drinking heavily can lead to
malnutrition and poor absorption and storage of thiamine. This
is the cause of Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome, which is
alcohol-related brain damage affecting language and thinking.
Beriberi can also occur in breast-fed infants when the mother
has an inadequate intake of thiamine. It can also affect
infants fed unusual formulas with inadequate thiamine
supplements.
Others at risk for beriberi include patients undergoing
dialysis, patients receiving high doses of diuretics, and
people in developing countries with limited diets who consume
milled rice.
Nervous system symptoms are caused by degeneration of the
nerve fibers and their insulation (myelin sheath). Heart
failure is the most common cause of death in people with
beriberi.
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