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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Folic acid, a water-soluble vitamin, has been used since the 1940s to treat some cases of macrocytic anemia without neurologic disease. Folate deficiency is best diagnosed with red blood cell folate levels along with macrocytosis and/or megaloblastic anemia. In addition to reversing overt deficiency, the vitamin may reduce the incidence of neural tube defects by 45% in women who receive 400 micrograms per day. It is recommended that all women of childbearing age take 400 micrograms of folate per day. Elevations in
homocysteine
levels, a metabolite intimately associated with folate, are also being found with increasing regularity in those with cardiovascular diseases.
Homocysteine
levels are reduced by folic acid administration. Therefore, there is some biologic plausibility, but not currently direct proof, for the assumption that folate supplements may prevent heart disease,
stroke
, and peripheral arterial disease. Controlled trials should take place before widespread food supplementation with folate is carried out on a large scale because of the possibility of outbreaks of permanent B12-related neurologic damage in those with undiagnosed pernicious anemia. However, if a patient has a premature cardiovascular event and has minimal risk factors, ordering a test to determine
homocysteine
level may be advisable, and if elevated, treating with folic acid supplement as long as B12 deficiency does not coexist.
...
PMID:The role of folic acid in deficiency states and prevention of disease. 904 May 15
Mild hyperhomocysteinemia, due to genetic or to environmental factors, is now recognized as a risk factor for premature arterial disease, including peripheral arterial occlusion, thrombotic
stroke
and myocardial infarction. It is defined by either an increased level of fasting
homocysteine
or by an increased level after loading with methionine, which is more frequently altered than the former. We studied the hemostatic parameters in 88 patients with premature arterial disease (mean age 43 +/- 11 years). We confirmed previously known hemostatic alterations described in vascular patients when compared to controls, but found that, among patients, some of these parameters were more altered in hyperhomocysteinemic patients. When fasting
homocysteine
was increased, higher alterations were found in factors VIIIc, von Willebrand and thombin-antithrombin complexes were more elevated. When post-methionine load
homocysteine
was increased, alterations in fibrinolytic parameters were more pronounced.
...
PMID:Mild hyperhomocysteinemia and hemostatic factors in patients with arterial vascular diseases. 906 95
It has been reported that patients with vascular disease seem to increase their concentration of plasma
homocysteine
after the acute episode, whereas reexamined control subjects do not change their concentration of plasma
homocysteine
over time. Since the main determinants of plasma
homocysteine
are serum cobalamin, blood folate and serum creatinine we measured these quantities in 20 control subjects and 49
stroke
patients in the acute phase and at reexamination 1.5-2 years after acute
stroke
onset. There were no significant differences between the levels of blood folate, serum cobalamin and serum creatinine in the acute and convalescent phase of all 49
stroke
patients. However, we noted a significant decrease of blood folate concentrations in a subgroup of patients (n = 25) who had increased plasma
homocysteine
concentrations. Thus the increase in plasma
homocysteine
concentrations in this group of patients may partly be caused by a marginal folate deficiency.
...
PMID:Marginal folate deficiency as a possible cause of hyperhomocystinaemia in stroke patients. 915 62
Severely elevated levels of total
homocysteine
(approximately millimolar) in the blood typify the childhood disease homocystinuria, whereas modest levels (tens of micromolar) are commonly found in adults who are at increased risk for vascular disease and
stroke
. Activation of the coagulation system and adverse effects of
homocysteine
on the endothelium and vessel wall are believed to underlie disease pathogenesis. Here we show that
homocysteine
acts as an agonist at the glutamate binding site of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor, but also as a partial antagonist of the glycine coagonist site. With physiological levels of glycine, neurotoxic concentrations of
homocysteine
are on the order of millimolar. However, under pathological conditions in which glycine levels in the nervous system are elevated, such as
stroke
and head trauma,
homocysteine
's neurotoxic (agonist) attributes at 10-100 microM levels outweigh its neuroprotective (antagonist) activity. Under these conditions neuronal damage derives from excessive Ca2+ influx and reactive oxygen generation. Accordingly,
homocysteine
neurotoxicity through overstimulation of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors may contribute to the pathogenesis of both homocystinuria and modest hyperhomocysteinemia.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity associated with dual actions of homocysteine at the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor. 915 76
Elevated
homocysteine
(
HCY
) levels in tissues and blood are associated with premature occlusive diseases. A number of techniques have been developed to assay
HCY
, including high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with fluorimetric or electrochemical detection, and radioenzymatic methods. The present study evaluated the adaptation of a liquid chromatographic, ion-exchange technique with postcolumn derivatization using ninhydrin. Fasting and moreover post-methionine load total plasma
HCY
were assayed in 50 patients three months after a
stroke
and in 20 age-matched controls. Ion-exchange liquid chromatography was performed on an amino acid analyzer using a modified procedure to improve methionine and
HCY
separation.
HCY
values in the fasting state were moderately but significantly increased (P<0.05) in the patients compared to the controls: 10.5+/-3.4 versus 9.3+/-2.3 micromol/l. The difference between the two groups was amplified in post-load
HCY
results, which were significantly increased (P<0.05) in the patients: 41.6+/-17.8 versus 29.2+/-5.5 micromol/l in controls. The relationship between cerebrovascular disease and impaired
HCY
metabolism has previously been emphasized by other investigators. Our findings suggest that certain inherited and/or acquired
HCY
disorders observed in the fasting state (14%) and especially in post-methionine load conditions (32%) may occur during acute disease, and that total plasma
HCY
can be determined by ion-exchange chromatography even after oral methionine loading.
...
PMID:Total plasma homocysteine determination by liquid chromatography before and after methionine loading. Results in cerebrovascular disease. 918 2
Hyperhomocysteinemia is a condition which, in the absence of kidney disease, indicates a disrupted sulfur amino acid metabolism, either because of vitamin (folate, B12 and B6) deficiency or a genetic defect. Epidemiological evidence suggests that mild hyperhomocysteinemia is associated with increased risk of arteriosclerotic disease and
stroke
. The relationship between hyperhomocysteinemia and thrombosis has been investigated in 10 studies involving a total of 1200 patients and 1200 controls. Eight of these studies demonstrated positive association with odds ratios that ranged from 2 to 13. This association was enhanced by including a methionine loading test. There is some evidence which suggests that hyperhomocysteinemia and APC resistance have a synergistic effect on the onset of thrombotic disease. Studies on the mechanism that underlies the relationship between thrombosis and hyperhomocysteinemia used non-physiologically high levels of
homocysteine
, rendering the data doubtful as to their patho-physiological relevance.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia and thrombosis: acquired conditions. 919 9
Homocysteine
is a graded risk factor for the incidence of
stroke
and for the degree of carotid atherosclerosis.
Homocysteine
is also a graded risk factor for the incidence of myocardial infarction but we do not know its precise relations to the severity of atherosclerosis in coronary patients. Seventy five symptomatic coronary patients were recruited for the study. Fifty of these patients had coronary artery disease only and were compared in a case-control manner to 50 healthy controls matched for age and sex. The 25 other coronary patients had also symptoms in another atherosclerotic territory (cerebral, peripheral or both) and were also compared to 25 matched controls. Mean plasma
homocysteine
level was significantly higher in coronary patients than in controls (11.7 +/- 0.7 mumol l-1, n = 50 versus 9.9 +/- 0.5 mumol l-1, n = 50, p < 0.05).
Homocysteine
in patients with symptomatic atherosclerosis in two or three arterial sites was 15.7 +/- 1.5 mumol l-1 which differed significantly from matched controls and from patients with coronary artery disease only (p = 0.01). The extent of coronary atherosclerosis evaluated by an angiographic coronary score correlated weakly to plasma
homocysteine
levels (r = 0.25, p < 0.05). The patients with both hypertension and high levels of
homocysteine
(> 11.3 mumol l-1, median value) had more severe coronary atherosclerosis (coronary score of 16.3 +/- 2.3 versus 11.9 +/- 0.9, p < 0.05) and more diffuse atherosclerosis (number of atherosclerotic territories of 1.5 +/- 0.2 versus 1.2 +/- 0.7, p = 0.08) than the coronary patients without this association. There were no other high risk association when considering the other classical risk factors. Thus, the highest levels of
homocysteine
were present in patients with coronary disease and another symptomatic localisation of atherosclerosis. A small gradient in the extent of coronary atherosclerosis was found with increasing levels of
homocysteine
. The presence of both hypertension and hyperhomocysteinemia was associated with more severe coronary atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Plasma homocysteine and the extent of atherosclerosis in patients with coronary artery disease. 926 41
Although hyperhomocysteinemia has been recognized recently as a prevalent risk factor for myocardial infarction and
stroke
, the mechanisms by which it accelerates arteriosclerosis have not been elucidated, mostly because the biological effects of
homocysteine
can only be demonstrated at very high concentrations and can be mimicked by cysteine, which indicates a lack of specificity. We found that 10-50 microM of
homocysteine
(a range that overlaps levels observed clinically) but not cysteine inhibited DNA synthesis in vascular endothelial cells (VEC) and arrested their growth at the G1 phase of the cell cycle.
Homocysteine
in this same range had no effect on the growth of vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC) or fibroblasts.
Homocysteine
decreased carboxyl methylation of p21(ras) (a G1 regulator whose activity is regulated by prenylation and methylation in addition to GTP-GDP exchange) by 50% in VEC but not VSMC, a difference that may be explained by the ability of
homocysteine
to dramatically increase levels of S-adenosylhomocysteine, a potent inhibitor of methyltransferase, in VEC but not VSMC. Moreover,
homocysteine
-induced hypomethylation in VEC was associated with a 66% reduction in membrane-associated p21(ras) and a 67% reduction in extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, which is a member of the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase family. Because the MAP kinases have been implicated in cell growth, the p21(ras)-MAP kinase pathway may represent one of the mechanisms that mediates
homocysteine
's effect on VEC growth. VEC damage is a hallmark of arteriosclerosis.
Homocysteine
-induced inhibition of VEC growth may play an important role in this disease process.
...
PMID:Inhibition of growth and p21ras methylation in vascular endothelial cells by homocysteine but not cysteine. 931 59
Hyperhomocysteinemia is regarded as a risk factor for
stroke
but its pathogenetic role has not yet been established in Black patients. We studied 24 Black patients admitted with cerebral thrombosis, and compared them with age- and sex-matched apparently healthy controls from the same community. Total
homocysteine
(tHcy) (free
homocysteine
, protein-bound
homocysteine
, the disulfide homocystine and the mixed disulfide
homocysteine
-cysteine) concentration was 10.91 (4.95-23.05) mumol/l in the
stroke
patients and 8.73 (3.95-15.10) mumol/l in controls (p = 0.031). This difference could not be explained by differences in vitamin B12, vitamin B6 or folate status. A subgroup of nine
stroke
patients with hypercreatininaemia (> 90 mumol/l, 75% of control concentrations) had significantly higher plasma tHcy concentrations [median (range) 9.10 (5.40-15.10) mumol/l] compared with controls [8.65 (3.96-13.89) mumol/l] (p = 0.002). Plasma tHcy concentrations of
stroke
patients with normal serum creatinine concentrations were not significantly different to those of controls. Hyperhomocysteinemia in Black patients with
stroke
may be partially caused by renal insufficiency. Therefore, while hyperhomocysteinemia may increase the risk of
stroke
, it is unlikely to be a primary initiating factor.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinaemia in black patients with cerebral thrombosis. 941 45
A case is presented of a woman who had an occlusive
stroke
at age 29. She was seen in a rehabilitation medicine clinic for central nervous system-mediated pain that had developed soon after a cerebrovascular event. After an extensive workup to find the cause of her cerebrovascular occlusion, it was discovered that she had a markedly elevated fasting plasma
homocysteine
level of 59 micromol/L. A discussion of premature vascular disease in the rehabilitation patient is followed by a short review of the clinical detection of, and potential therapy for, hyperhomocysteinemia.
...
PMID:Hyperhomocysteinemia as a cause of premature stroke in a young patient. 952 90
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