Souhrn:
Background: Elevated homocysteine levels have been associated with an increased risk of ischemic heart
disease (IHD) and stroke, but whether these associations are causal is uncertain.
Methods:We reviewedthe evidence from ameta-analysis of 30 population studies of differences in homocysteine
concentrations (involving 5000 IHD and 1100 stroke events in apparently healthy people), and from a meta-analysis
of 40 studies (involving 11,000 IHD events) that examined the association of TT genotype for methylene-tetrahydrofolate
reductase (MTHFR) with risk of IHD.
Results: Stronger associations were observed in retrospective studies of homocysteine measured in blood
collected after the onset of disease than in prospective studies of individualswhohad no history of cardiovascular
disease when blood was collected. Among prospective studies, a 25% lower blood homocysteine was associated
with about 10% lower risk of IHD and about 20% lower risk of stroke, after adjustment for known cardiovascular
risk factors. About 10% of the population have a genetic defect in the methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase
(MTHFR) enzyme and have about 25% higher homocysteine levels. We showed that individuals who have TT
genotype have a 16% higher risk of IHD compared with the CC genotype.
Conclusions: These results suggest that elevated homocysteine is a modest independent predictor of risk of IHD
and stroke. The results obtained for genetically determined differences in homocysteine suggest that these
associations are causal.Randomizedtrials of folic acid-based vitamins in people at “high-risk” of vascular disease
are currently underway to assess if lowering homocysteine might reduce risk of vascular disease.
Klíčová slova:
homocysteine, coronary heart disease, stroke.
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