DO NOT USE - ALL INFORMATION LIKELY INCORRECT IF NOT ACTIVELY DANGEROUS
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
RECOGNITION
- Serum folate <3 microgram/L is indicative of folate deficiency
- ‘False positive’ reduced serum folate in:
- normal pregnancy
- anorexia
- acute alcohol consumption
- medications e.g. anticonvulsant therapy. Consult BNF
Precautions
- Low folate may be with low serum cobalamin
- if so, treat with B12 before commencing folic acid
- If strong clinical suspicion of folate deficiency, despite a normal serum level:
- exclude cobalamin deficiency
- measure red cell folate assay
Specific symptoms for reduced folate
- Reduced sense of taste
- Diarrhoea
- Numbness and tingling in the feet and hands
- Muscle weakness
- Depression
Assess for cause
- Diet (most common cause)
- Alcohol consumption
- Gastrointestinal diseases e.g.
- coeliac disease, inflammatory bowel disease, liver disease, GI surgery
- Pregnancy status
- Exfoliative skin diseases
- Renal dialysis
- Medications
- History/symptoms due to haemolytic anaemia
TREATMENT
- Dietary sources of folate
- asparagus, broccoli, brown rice, chickpeas, sprouts, peas
- Follow schedules outlined in BNF
- Renal dialysis patients, follow renal protocols
- note Renavit® contains 1 mg folic acid. Give after dialysis
- excess folic acid may cause dynamic bone disease
- Transfusion not indicated in haematinic deficiency unless haemodynamic instability
- see Red blood cell transfusion guideline
- see Chronic anaemia guideline
ASSESSING RESPONSE
- Monitor reticulocyte count and FBC parameters initially
- Monitor serum folate level as dictated by clinical indication
DISCHARGE
- Inform GP of:
- cause
- treatment
- monitoring required
- If folate deficiency secondary to haemolysis liaise with clinical haematology for follow-up
Last reviewed: 2024-01-23