“Normal” vitamin B12 levels may still leave older adults vulnerable to hidden brain damage and cognitive decline
University of California - San Francisco
Vitamin B12 is best known for helping the body make DNA, red blood cells, and healthy nerve tissue. But research suggests that simply meeting the current minimum standard may not always be enough, especially for older adults.
A UCSF led study found that healthy older people with lower
vitamin B12 levels, even when those levels still fell within the accepted
normal range, showed signs of subtle neurological and cognitive problems. The
findings raise a provocative possibility: some people may be told their B12
status is fine while their brains are already showing early signs of strain.
"Normal" B12 May Not Always Mean Optimal
The study, published in Annals of Neurology,
looked at older adults who did not have dementia or mild cognitive impairment.
Even in this relatively healthy group, lower levels of active B12 were linked
to slower thinking, slower visual processing, and more visible injury in the
brain's white matter. White matter is made up of the nerve fibers that allow
different parts of the brain to communicate.
The work was led by senior author Ari J. Green, MD, of the UCSF Departments of Neurology and Ophthalmology and the Weill Institute for Neurosciences. Green and his colleagues said the results call attention to a possible weakness in current B12 guidelines. The minimum threshold used to define deficiency may not capture early functional changes in the nervous system.
"Previous studies that defined healthy amounts of B12
may have missed subtle functional manifestations of high or low levels that can
affect people without causing overt symptoms," said Green, noting that
clear deficiencies of the vitamin are commonly associated with a type of
anemia. "Revisiting the definition of B12 deficiency to incorporate
functional biomarkers could lead to earlier intervention and prevention of
cognitive decline."
Brain Scans Revealed a Troubling Pattern
Researchers enrolled 231 healthy participants through the
Brain Aging Network for Cognitive Health (Branch) study at UCSF. The
participants had an average age of 71, and none had dementia or mild cognitive
impairment.
Their average blood B12 level was 414.8 pmol/L, far above
the U.S. minimum cutoff of 148 pmol/L. Instead of relying only on total B12,
the researchers focused on the biologically active form of the vitamin, which
may better reflect how much B12 the body can actually use.
After adjusting for age, sex, education, and cardiovascular
risk factors, the team found that participants with lower active B12 had slower
processing speed on cognitive tests. The effect was stronger with older age.
They also had delayed responses to visual stimuli, pointing to slower visual
processing and reduced brain signaling efficiency.
MRI scans added another warning sign. Participants with
lower active B12 had a higher volume of white matter lesions, which are areas
of brain injury that have been linked to cognitive decline, dementia, and
stroke risk.
Why Older Adults May Be More Vulnerable
The study focused on older adults, a group that may be
especially sensitive to lower B12 because absorption can become less efficient
with age. Some medications, digestive conditions, and diets low in animal-based
foods can also increase the risk of low B12.
Co-first author Alexandra Beaudry-Richard, MSc, said the
findings suggest that low but technically normal B12 could have broader effects
than previously recognized. These levels could "impact cognition to a
greater extent than what we previously thought, and may affect a much larger
proportion of the population than we realize." Beaudry-Richard is
currently completing her doctorate in research and medicine at the UCSF
Department of Neurology and the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at
the University of Ottawa.
"In addition to redefining B12 deficiency, clinicians
should consider supplementation in older patients with neurological symptoms
even if their levels are within normal limits," she said.
"Ultimately, we need to invest in more research about the underlying
biology of B12 insufficiency, since it may be a preventable cause of cognitive
decline."
Newer Evidence Adds Important Context
Research published after and around the UCSF study has added
nuance rather than a simple answer. A 2025 comprehensive review concluded
that B12 deficiency remains a modifiable risk factor for neurological and
cognitive problems, especially in high risk groups such as older adults and
vegetarians. The review also highlighted the growing importance of better
biomarkers and brain imaging for detecting problems earlier.
A 2025 systematic
review and meta analysis of randomized trials found that
supplementation with B vitamins, including B6, B9, or B12, produced a very
small benefit in global cognitive function among older adults. The authors
rated the cleaned analysis as high certainty, but the effect was small,
suggesting that supplementation is not a dramatic brain boost for everyone.
Another 2025 study using
Mendelian randomization found no clear evidence that genetically higher total
serum B12 levels protect the general population from psychiatric disorders or
cognitive impairment. However, the authors noted an important limitation: their
analysis used total serum B12, not the bioactive form measured in the UCSF
work.
Together, the newer evidence supports a more careful
message. B12 is clearly essential for the nervous system, and deficiency should
not be ignored. But simply raising B12 for everyone may not be the answer. The
more urgent question is whether current testing misses people whose brains are
already affected despite "normal" results.
A Preventable Risk Worth Taking Seriously
The UCSF findings do not prove that lower active B12
directly causes cognitive decline, and they do not mean every older adult
should begin taking supplements without medical guidance. They do, however,
suggest that the current definition of B12 deficiency may be too blunt for
brain health.
For clinicians, the study points to the possible value of
looking beyond total B12, especially when older patients have neurological
symptoms. For patients, it highlights a practical message: a "normal"
lab result may not always tell the full story, particularly when subtle changes
in memory, thinking speed, or vision are already appearing.
Authors: Co first author is Ahmed Abdelhak, MD, PhD, of the
UCSF Department of Neurology and the Weill Institute for Neurosciences.
Funding and Disclosures: Westridge Foundation and the
Canadian Institutes of Health and Research. There are no conflicts of interest
to report.
Journal Reference:
- Alexandra
Beaudry‐Richard, Ahmed Abdelhak, Rowan Saloner, Simone
Sacco, Shivany C. Montes, Frederike C. Oertel, Christian Cordano, Nour
Jabassini, Kirtana Ananth, Apraham Gomez, Azeen Keihani, Makenna Chapman,
Sree Javvadi, Shikha Saha, Adam Staffaroni, Christopher Songster, Martin
Warren, John W. Boscardin, Joel Kramer, Bruce Miller, Joshua W. Miller,
Ralph Green, Ari J. Green. Vitamin
B12 Levels Association with Functional and Structural Biomarkers of
Central Nervous System Injury in Older Adults. Annals of
Neurology, 2025; 97 (6): 1190 DOI: 10.1002/ana.27200
