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Javed Anees: The Hidden Power of Biotin in Modern Medicine
Jul 6, 2026, 13:10

Javed Anees: The Hidden Power of Biotin in Modern Medicine

Javed Anees, Medical Consultant at Government of Kerala, shared a post on LinkedIn:

“Biotin (Vitamin B7): More Than a ‘Hair Vitamin.’

Biotin is widely recognized for its role in maintaining healthy hair and skin, but its true clinical importance extends far beyond cosmetic health.

As an essential cofactor for five carboxylase enzymes, biotin is critical for energy metabolism, fatty acid synthesis, gluconeogenesis, and normal neurological function.

Although nutritional deficiency is uncommon, clinicians should recognize acquired and inherited causes.

Long-term use of antiseizure medications—particularly valproate and enzyme-inducing agents—may be associated with reduced biotin status or alopecia in some patients.

Inherited disorders such as biotinidase deficiency and holocarboxylase synthetase deficiency are important because they are readily treatable, and early diagnosis can prevent irreversible neurological injury.

Another key clinical pearl is that high-dose biotin supplementation can interfere with several immunoassays, including thyroid function tests and cardiac troponin assays, potentially leading to misleading laboratory results if supplement use is not identified.

The take-home message is simple: think beyond hair loss.

Biotin represents a small vitamin with significant implications in neurology, pediatrics, metabolic medicine, and laboratory diagnostics.

I recently prepared this evidence-based educational infographic summarizing the biochemistry, clinical features, neurological disorders, diagnosis, and therapeutic applications of biotin.

I hope it serves as a useful learning resource for students and clinicians alike.”

Javed Anees: The Hidden Power of Biotin in Modern Medicine

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