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Vitamin B12, also referred to as cobalamin, is a complex organometallic compound in which a cobalt atom is situated within a corrin ring. It is a water-soluble vitamin which is synthesized by microorganisms. It cannot be synthesized in the human body and is seldom found in products of plant origin.
Main sources of vitamin B12 are meat, fish, eggs and dairy products. The uptake in the gastrointestinal tract depends on intrinsic factor, which is synthesized by the gastric parietal cells, and on the cubam receptor in the distal ileum. The most frequent cause of severe vitamin B12 deficiency is a lack of intrinsic factor due to autoimmune atrophic gastritis.
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