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Renal function exerts only a minor influence on high plasma homocysteine concentrations in patients with acute coronary syndromes.

Author

  • Torfi Jonasson
  • Hans Öhlin
  • Anders S Andersson
  • Margret Arnadottir
  • Björn Hultberg

Summary, in English

It has been suggested that hyperhomocysteinemia observed in patients with occlusive vascular disease is caused by reduced renal function secondary to renovascular disease. We have therefore used serum cystatin C, a new sensitive marker for glomerular filtration, in 59 patients with acute coronary syndromes and high plasma homocysteine (tHcy) concentration to measure renal function. Samples were also obtained from 34 patients with low-normal plasma tHcy and 50 control subjects. The patients with low-normal plasma tHcy concentration showed decreased concentrations of serum cystatin C and serum creatinine and increased concentrations of blood folate and serum cobalamin compared to the controls and to the patients with high plasma tHcy. There was a large overlap in cystatin C concentrations between patients with high and low-normal plasma tHcy. None of the parameters investigated except plasma tHcy were significantly different in the group of patients with high plasma tHcy concentration compared to the control group. In order to further demonstrate the importance of renal impairment, a subgroup of the patients with high plasma tHcy was supplemented daily with folic acid 5 mg, pyridoxine 40 mg and cyancobalamin 1 mg for 3 months. Vitamin therapy reduced plasma tHcy from 18.3+/-4.6 pmol/l to 9.6+/-2.2 pmol/l (p<0.0001). However, vitamin treatment did not strengthen the correlation between cystatin C and plasma tHcy concentrations. These findings do not support the hypothesis that subtle renal dysfunction is an important cause of high plasma tHcy concentration in patients with acute coronary syndromes.

Publishing year

2002

Language

English

Pages

137-142

Publication/Series

Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine

Volume

40

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

De Gruyter

Topic

  • Clinical Laboratory Medicine

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1434-6621