Vitamin E deficiency


Vitamin E deficiency is a rare condition caused by low levels of vitamin E that may result from malabsorption disorders, or impaired lipid transport. As a potent antioxidant, vitamin E protects cell membranes from oxidative damage, and its deficiency primarily affects tissues with high fatty acid content, especially the nervous system. Clinically, patients may present with spinocerebellar ataxia, polyneuropathy, muscle weakness, and retinopathy. Diagnosis is confirmed through low serum vitamin E levels, and treatment involves dietary supplementation with vitamin E and addressing the underlying cause of malabsorption. The term 'vitamin E' commonly refers to α-tocopherol, and so α-tocopherol deficiency refers to the same syndrome.

Signs and symptoms

Vitamin E deficiency is typically seen only in the setting of severe and prolonged illnesses causing steatorrhea or other forms of malabsorption. Other patients may have had bariatric surgery or surgical removal of the small intestine. Many of these patients also have deficiencies of other fat-soluble vitamins, and an isolated deficiency of vitamin E is rare. As a result, it may be difficult to definitively identify vitamin E as the cause of any of these symptoms until they are well-progressed.
Typically, the first identifiable sign of vitamin E deficiency is areflexia, or the loss of deep tendon reflexes, like the patellar reflex. The usual progression is then to ataxic gait and then to a loss of dorsal column sensations. The onset and progression of symptoms is slow, often taking years to be recognized.
Signs of vitamin E deficiency include the following:

Causes

Vitamin E deficiency is rare. There are no records of it from a simple lack of vitamin E in a person's diet, but it can arise from physiological abnormalities. It occurs in the people in the following situations:

Diagnosis

The U.S. Institute of Medicine defines deficiency as a serum concentration of less than 12 μmol/L. The symptoms can be enough for a diagnosis to be formed.

Treatment

Treatment is oral vitamin E supplementation.