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Homocysteine and stroke
Journal article

Homocysteine and stroke

Abstract

During the past year epidemiological studies have linked elevated plasma total homocysteine concentrations with an increased risk of ischaemic stroke because of arterial disease. Laboratory studies have further explored the mitogenic effects of total homocysteine on vascular smooth muscle, and cytotoxic and thrombophilic effects on vascular endothelium. Also, a clinical trial has shown that lowering total homocysteine by means of multivitamin therapy decreases the rate of abnormal exercise electrocardiography tests. However, it remains to be determined whether lowering total homocysteine prevents hard clinical outcome events, such as stroke and other serious vascular events. An alternative explanation for the observed association between elevated total homocysteine and stroke is a confounding effect of factors associated with hyperhomocysteinaemia (e.g. cigarette smoking, renal impairment, an atherogenic diet, cystine deficiency, folate deficiency) or perhaps even the acute vascular events themselves, whereby the tissue damage temporarily increases total homocysteine levels. The results of ongoing clinical trials in stroke patients to determine the impact of multivitamin therapy on recurrent stroke and other serious vascular events are awaited.

Authors

Hankey GJ; Eikelboom JW

Journal

Current Opinion in Neurology, Vol. 14, No. 1, pp. 95–102

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

February 14, 2001

DOI

10.1097/00019052-200102000-00015

ISSN

1350-7540

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