Title of article
Hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin B-12 deficiency are more striking in Syrians than in Germans—causes and implications
Author/Authors
Wolfgang Herrmann، نويسنده , , Rima Obeid، نويسنده , , Muhidien Jouma، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
8
From page
143
To page
150
Abstract
Hyperhomocysteinemia is an accepted risk factor for coronary artery disease , but the determining factors are not fully understood. We investigated hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin deficiency in Syrian coronary patients and apparently healthy Syrian and German controls. We enrolled 273 Syrian patients with angiographically confirmed stenosis, along with 159 Syrian and 75 German controls. Plasma total homocysteine (HCY), cystathionine, methylmalonic acid (MMA), vitamin B-6, B-12, folate, lipids, apolipoproteins and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (C677T-MTHFR) mutation were analysed. There was a very high prevalence of hyperhomocysteinemia (>12 μmol/l) in Syrians (patients 61%, controls 44%, Germans 16%) together with functional vitamin B-12 deficiency diagnosed by elevated MMA (patients 49%, controls 47%, Germans 3%), which was in contrast to the low frequency of decreased serum vitamin B-12 (12% in patients, 7% in Syrian controls). The HCY concentration in German controls was lower than in Syrians, median 8.8 vs. 11.3 μmol/l. The vitamin B-12 deficiency induces folate trapping; higher levels of folate are needed to prevent hyperhomocysteinemia. Germans achieved the HCY level of 12 μmol/l at significantly lower folate concentrations 4.4 ng/ml, than Syrians with normal MMA ( 16.7 nmol/l folate) or Syrians with high MMA ( 23.3 nmol/l folate). Smoking and homozygous state for C677T-MTHFR mutation contributed to hyperhomocysteinemia. We could confirm that the reasons for hyperhomocysteinemia in Syrians were in fact mostly related to a relative folate deficiency, which is due to a vitamin B-12 shortage. Vitamin B-12 deficiency induces folate trapping. Besides lifestyle, other presently unknown factors may contribute to hyperhomocysteinemia and vitamin B-12 deficiency in Syrians.
Keywords
hyperhomocysteinemia , vitamin B-12 , folate , MTHFR mutation , coronary artery disease , methylmalonic acid
Journal title
Atherosclerosis
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Atherosclerosis
Record number
630930
Link To Document