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1.
Myocardial Performance in Elite Athletes: The Role of Homocysteine, Iron, and Lipids.
Duyuler, S
Medical science monitor : international medical journal of experimental and clinical research. 2019;:1194-1203
Abstract
BACKGROUND The myocardial performance index (MPI) is a comprehensive measure of global systolic and diastolic function of the ventricle, and it has an inverse correlation with maximal oxygen consumption. In this study, the potential association between left ventricle MPI and biochemical biomarkers (including iron, homocysteine, and lipids) in elite athletes was investigated. MATERIAL AND METHODS This cross-sectional observational study consisted of 80 young male elite soccer and basketball players (age: 18-34 years) examined for a seasonal medical check-up. Cardiological examinations and transthoracic echocardiography of these athletes were performed and blood samples were analyzed according to standard laboratory protocols. Tissue Doppler recording was acquired from the mitral annulus using apical 4-chamber view and then the tissue Doppler-derived MPI was computed. RESULTS Athletes were separated into 2 groups based on MPI values (MPI ≤0.40 and MPI >0.40), and baseline demographic, clinical, and biochemical variables of the study participants were compared between these 2 groups. Serum triglyceride, high-density lipoprotein, total cholesterol, homocysteine levels, and iron parameters did not significantly differ between groups, while low-density lipoprotein level was significantly lower in the MPI ≤0.40 group (103.8±26.0 mg/dl vs. 116.8±30.2 mg/dl; p=0.043). Correlation analysis and multivariate linear regression analysis demonstrated a significant association between low-density lipoprotein and MPI. CONCLUSIONS In this study, various biochemical markers were evaluated for possible association with left ventricle MPI as a surrogate of cardiac performance. Among these biomarkers, only low-density lipoprotein was significantly associated with MPI in elite athletes.
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2.
Medicines associated with folate-homocysteine-methionine pathway disruption.
Vidmar, M, Grželj, J, Mlinarič-Raščan, I, Geršak, K, Dolenc, MS
Archives of toxicology. 2019;(2):227-251
Abstract
Folate is vital for cell development and growth. It is involved in one-carbon transfer reactions essential for the synthesis of purines and pyrimidines. It also acts in conjunction with cobalamin (vitamin B12) as a fundamental cofactor in the remethylation cycle that converts homocysteine to methionine. A deficiency in folate or vitamin B12 can lead to elevated homocysteine level, which has been identified as an independent risk factor in several health-related conditions. Adequate folate levels are essential in women of childbearing age and in pregnant women, and folate deficiency is associated with several congenital malformations. Low folate levels can be caused by dietary deficiencies, a genetic predisposition or treatment with medicines that affect folate concentration. Women who are pregnant or of child-bearing age commonly use medicines, so it is important to identify the basic biochemical mechanisms by which medicines interfere with the folate-homocysteine-methionine pathway. This review focuses on prescription medicines associated with folate disruption. It also summarizes their undesirable/toxic effects. Recommendations regarding folate supplementation during medical therapy are also reviewed.
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The impact of homocysteine, B12, and D vitamins levels on functional neurocognitive performance in HIV-positive subjects.
Falasca, K, Di Nicola, M, Di Martino, G, Ucciferri, C, Vignale, F, Occhionero, A, Vecchiet, J
BMC infectious diseases. 2019;(1):105
Abstract
BACKGROUND The correlation among high levels of total homocysteine, low levels of B12vitamin, and neurocognitive impairment in HIV negative patients has been the main research topic in some of the latest reviews. The aim of this study was to examine if the alteration of homocysteine, B12 vitamin, and D vitamins plasma levels was present in HIV-positive, and their relationship with cognitive function. METHODS 57 HIV infected were enrolled and underwent the serum measurement of homocysteine, B12, and D vitamins. The neurocognitive evaluation investigated 5 cognitive domains, through a neuropsychological battery test RESULTS Homocysteine was found to be elevated in 70.2% of cases, B12 vitamin mean levels were low in 8 participants (14.0%), and 8 patients had D hypovitaminosis (14.0%). Abnormal homocysteine levels were associated with worse performance of verbal fluency (p = 0.003) and worse executive function (Stroop E test p = 0.040). The 25-OH D hypovitaminosis was associated with worse performances in executive functions in three different tests: Stroop E (p = 0.049), Trail B (p = 0.035), and Wais Digit Span (p = 0.042). Pathological levels of B12 Vitamin were also associated to worse performances in executive functions (Trail B Test and Wais Digit Span respectively p = 0.002 and 0.029) and with a lower speed in psychomotor processing (Peg Board Test on dominant hand, p = 0.014). CONCLUSIONS In this study serum homocysteine, B12, and D vitamin levels are associated with neurocognitive performances; in fact low performance neurocognitive was correlated with hyperhomocysteine and low B12vitamin, and D vitamin levels. Evidence of the alteration of these parameters could facilitate the early identification of a neurocognitive impairment.
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4.
Homocysteine: A modifiable culprit of cognitive impairment for us to conquer?
Ji, Y, Lyu, P, Jin, W, Li, X, Li, X, Dong, Y
Journal of the neurological sciences. 2019;:128-136
Abstract
BACKGROUND Cognitive impairment, including mild cognitive impairment and its progressive deterioration to dementia, results in great hazards to the patient and the surrounding society. While some of the risk factors are unmodifiable, such as age, lower educational attainment, and genetic factors, another proposed one-homocysteine, an amino acid produced in the methylation cycle of protein metabolism is modifiable by cheap and easily accessible B-vitamins treatments in medical practice. OBJECTIVE AND METHODS To investigate the relationship between homocysteine and cognitive impairment, elucidate the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms and exploit any potential therapeutic values of homocysteine-lowering treatments in prevention and/or treatment in cognitive decline, we searched on the PUBMED databases surrounding around the physiological homocysteine metabolism, detrimental effects of abnormal homocysteine concentrations on the brain, and review observational and interventional experiments to date estimating the relationship between homocysteine and cognitive impairment with relatively powerful evidence. RESULTS Intrinsic and environmental factors help maintain the normal homocysteine concentrations, and pathological homocysteine concentrations exert adverse effects mediated by cellular and vascular pathways. Although many observational studies have suggested a causal link between hyperhomocysteinemia and cognitive impairment, the majority of randomized controlled trials failed to observe marked benefits on cognition by homocysteine-lowering treatments using B-vitamins, partly arising from some design limitations including: not identifying individuals at earlier stages of cognitive impairment who are most likely to benefit, overlooking any latent safety hazards of multiple vitamin supplementation, lack of sensitive and domain-specific cognitive tests, and interference of other underappreciated factors. CONCLUSION More studies are required to better explain the related pathophysiological mechanisms, improve experimental methods, and investigate the preventive or/and therapeutic effects of homocysteine-lowering strategies on cognitive impairment.
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5.
Association between Homocysteine and Arterial Stiffness in Women with a History of Preeclampsia.
Wu, F, Yang, H, Liu, B
Journal of vascular research. 2019;(3):152-159
Abstract
Growing evidence has reported that a history of preeclampsia (PE) increases the risk of developing cardiovascular disease (CVD). Arterial stiffness plays a predictive role in CVD. Previous studies have demonstrated the close association between homocysteine (Hcy) level and arterial stiffness in community-based populations. This study was to assess whether Hcy level was independently associated with arterial stiffness in 168 women with a PE history who were analyzed at a 5-year follow-up. Brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) was measured by an automatic pulse-wave analyzer and a value >1,400 cm/s was defined as high arterial stiffness. Biochemical parameters were recorded and an Hcy value >10 μmol/L was defined as having hyperhomocysteine (H-Hcy). Variables that were significantly associated with baPWV were tested for independence by multivariate logistic regression analysis. We found that body mass index (OR 1.017, 95% CI 1.008-1.029), systolic blood pressure (OR 1.048, 95% CI 1.019-1.072), total cholesterol (OR 1.059, 95% CI 1.007-1.086), and Hcy level (OR 1.021, 95% CI 1.010-1.037) were independent determinants of baPWV in women with previous PE. Our findings indicate that Hcy pathway might be involved in arterial stiffness in women with a PE history. Whether Hcy would be a promising biomarker for serial stratified CVD risk management in these women deserves further evaluation on a large scale.
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Hyperhomocysteinaemia and the risk of recurrent venous thrombosis: results from the MEGA follow-up study.
Hensen, ADO, Lijfering, WM, Cannegieter, SC, Rosendaal, FR, van Hylckama Vlieg, A
British journal of haematology. 2019;(2):219-226
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Abstract
The measurement of homocysteine is still part of routine thrombosis or thrombophilia work-up in many thrombosis centres in the world. Previous observational studies have shown that hyperhomocysteinaemia is associated with an increased risk of first and recurrent venous thrombosis (VT). Randomised trials, however, showed no benefit of homocysteine-lowering therapy on the risk of first or recurrent VT. This discrepancy could be explained by incomplete adjustment for confounders in the observational studies. We investigated in a large population-based follow-up study whether if the levels of homocysteine and its metabolites, methionine and cysteine, were associated with recurrent VT. Approximately three months after discontinuation of anticoagulant treatment, homocysteine, methionine and cysteine concentrations were measured in 2210 patients with VT. During a median follow-up of 6·9 years, 340 patients developed a recurrence (incidence rate, 2·8/100 patient-years). We found that elevated homocysteine concentrations were not associated with an increased risk of recurrent VT, neither as a continuous variable per 5 μmol/l increase (hazard ratio [HR] 0·98 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0·90-1·04)) nor when levels were >95th (>23·0 μmol/l) percentile (HR 1·03 (95% CI, 0·65-1·64)). Similar results were obtained for cysteine and methionine values. We conclude that hyperhomocysteinaemia is not associated with an increased risk of recurrent VT.
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7.
Rehydration during exercise prevents the increase of homocysteine concentrations.
Maroto-Sánchez, B, Lopez-Torres, O, Valtueña, J, Benito, PJ, Palacios, G, Díaz-Martínez, ÁE, González-Lamuño, D, Zinellu, A, González-Gross, M, Carru, C
Amino acids. 2019;(2):193-204
Abstract
This study aimed to assess the effect of rehydration during and after acute aerobic submaximal exercise on total homocysteine (tHcy) concentrations and related parameters in physically active adult males. Twenty trained males (29.4 ± 7.9 years old) completed four exercise tests: two without rehydration during exercise (NH1 and NH2), one with rehydration during exercise using water (H1) and one with rehydration during exercise using an isotonic sports drink (H2). After finishing the exercise tests, subjects followed a rehydration protocol for 2 h. Serum tHcy, vitamin B12, folate, creatine and creatinine were analysed before, after and at 2, 6 and 24 h after exercise. Data were analysed with and without correcting for haemoconcentration to assess the changes in tHcy related. The methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) 677TT genotype was also analysed. THcy (uncorrected by haemoconcentration) increased significantly after exercise (P < 0.05) in the NH1 and NH2 tests [mean increase ± SD: 1.55 ± 0.33 (15.18%) and 1.76 ± 0.25 (17.69%) µmol/L, respectively], while no significant differences were found in the H1 and H2 tests [mean increase: 0.65 (6.29%) and 0.90 (8.69%) μmol/L, respectively]. The increase was partly due to haemoconcentration and partly due to the metabolism underlying acute exercise. THcy concentrations recovered to baseline after 24 h in all tests. In conclusion, adequate rehydration during acute aerobic exercise using either water or a sports drink maintains tHcy concentrations at baseline and for up to 2 h after exercise in physically active male adults and prevents further increases when compared to no rehydration.
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Association Between Cognitive Impairment and Vitamin B12, Folate, and Homocysteine Status in Elderly Adults: A Retrospective Study.
Baroni, L, Bonetto, C, Rizzo, G, Bertola, C, Caberlotto, L, Bazzerla, G
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD. 2019;(2):443-453
Abstract
BACKGROUND Cognitive disorders in old age have a serious impact on the health and social aspects of patients and their families. OBJECTIVE The scope of this paper is to explore the role of cobalamin and folate that has been linked to cognitive decline, not only as a deficiency state depending on malnutrition, but also a determinant in cognitive impairment. METHODS A 6-year observational, retrospective study was conducted by collecting the routine blood analyses and cognitive screening scores of patients aged 60 years or older, followed at our Centre for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Cognitive Disorders. RESULTS In a linear regression with a multi-vitamin model, higher folate concentrations were correlated with better cognitive performances through MMSE score, even after correction for sex, age, and years of education (beta = 0.144, p = 0.001). Estimated MMSE marginal means for folate versus homocysteine showed that folate deficiency was associated with worse cognitive performances, with a more severe cognitive impairment when hyperhomocysteinemia was present. CONCLUSION The assessment of B-vitamin status among elderly adults can contribute to an economic and practical approach to the prevention and management of cognitive decline. Future studies focused to define optimal vitamin status are warranted.
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Homocysteine, vitamin B12, and folate levels in patients with multiple sclerosis in Chinese population: A case-control study and meta-analysis.
Pan, L, Yin, Y, Chen, J, Ma, Z, Chen, Y, Deng, X, Zhang, HT, Leng, H, Wu, K
Multiple sclerosis and related disorders. 2019;:101395
Abstract
BACKGROUND Current studies suggested discrepancies on the correlations between multiple sclerosis (MS) and blood levels of homocysteine (Hcy), vitamin B12 (VB12), and folate. We performed a case-control study and meta-analysis to help resolve the controversy of these lab values in Chinese patients with MS. METHODS We recruited 80 Chinese MS patients, 86 age/sex matched neurological controls (patients with peripheral vertigo or sleep disorders), and 80 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. Serum Hcy levels were measured using flourimetric high-performance liquid chromatography, serum levels of VB12 and folate using immune assay. A literature search of PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang, and SinoMed was conducted for case-control studies with pure Chinese populations published up to March 16, 2019. The effective size was estimated by the pooled standardized mean difference (SMD) and associated 95% confidence interval (CI). RESULTS The case-control study results suggest higher Hcy levels (mean ± SD) and frequency of hyperhomocysteinemia in the Chinese MS cases than control groups (all p < 0.001), lower for VB12 levels (mean ± SD, p = 0.043 or 0.039). No significant difference was observed for levels of folate (mean ± SD, both p > 0.05), and for frequency of folate or VB12 deficiency (all p > 0.05). Analysis of pooled SMDs and 95% CIs suggested increased Hcy levels in Chinese MS patients (SMD: 2.31, 95% CI: 1.33-3.28, p < 0.001), and in relapsing or remitting cases relative to controls (SMD: 0.94 or 0.85, 95% CI: 0.49-1.39 or 0.35-1.34, both p < 0.001). The meta-analysis results also suggested reduced VB12 levels in Chinese MS patients (SMD: -0.30, 95% CI: -0.46-0.14, p < 0.001), and in relapsing MS patients compared to controls (SMD: -0.31, 95% CI: -0.47-0.15, p < 0.001), while no statistical difference for cases in remission. No significant difference was observed for levels folate in all comparisons. CONCLUSION Patients with MS tend to have increased blood Hcy levels compared to controls. MS patients of Chinese origin and those in relapse may have decreased levels of VB12. Hcy and VB12 may contribute to pathogenesis of the disease, and VB12 may correlate with MS relapse.
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Higher maternal plasma folate, vitamin B12 and homocysteine levels in women with preeclampsia.
Pisal, H, Dangat, K, Randhir, K, Khaire, A, Mehendale, S, Joshi, S
Journal of human hypertension. 2019;(5):393-399
Abstract
Micronutrients like vitamin B12 and folate play an important role in nucleic acid metabolism, cell growth, and are important determinants of fetal growth. The present study examined the levels of maternal and cord plasma folate, vitamin B12, homocysteine, and their association with birth outcome in women with preeclampsia (PE). This study includes 450 normotensive control (NC) and 350 women with PE. PE women were further classified into women delivering at term (n = 224) and preterm (n = 126). Maternal and cord blood was collected at delivery. The levels of maternal vitamin B12 (p < 0.05), folate (p < 0.01), and homocysteine (p < 0.01) were higher in the PE group as compared to the NC group. Maternal folate levels were higher in both term and preterm groups, while vitamin B12 levels were higher only in the preterm group as compared to NC group. In contrast, homocysteine was higher only in the term PE group. Similar changes were also observed in the cord plasma. There was a positive association of maternal plasma homocysteine with systolic (r = 0.151, p = 0.000, n = 578) and diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.213, p = 0.000, n = 578) in the whole cohort. A negative association of maternal folate with systolic blood pressure (r = -0.105, p = 0.048, n = 352) while a positive association with baby weight in the NC group (r = 0.116, p = 0.029, n = 352). The present study suggests that maternal and cord micronutrient levels are altered in women with PE.