HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
Researchers Take A Second Look At Homocysteine's Link To Heart Disease

DALLAS, July 21 -- A new twist in research on homocysteine is questioning whether high blood levels of the chemical, a byproduct of the body's metabolism of certain foods, really are an independent predictor of heart disease.

Previous studies have found a strong association between elevated blood levels of homocysteine and heart disease, suggesting a causal relationship.

However, in a study reported in today's Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, researchers did not find a causal relationship between homocysteine and risk of heart disease. Instead, scientists showed that vitamin B-6 was a better indicator for heart disease risk. People who had the highest blood levels of vitamin B-6 had about one-third the risk of developing heart disease when compared to people with the lowest levels of vitamin B-6.

Researchers used frozen blood samples to determine levels of homocysteine and B vitamins -- which can reduce homocysteine levels -- in 759 people from 45 to 64 years of age who participated in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study.

The study participants were initially evaluated during a three-year span from 1987 to '89. Most of the participants were reexamined between 1990 and '92 and again between 1993 and '95. During the study, 232 people developed heart disease.

"I believe that homocysteine isn't as important as some previous research suggests and that more studies are needed to clarify how homocysteine, B vitamins and heart disease are linked," says Aaron Folsom, M.D., of the University of Minnesota and lead author of the study. Folsom and his colleagues report that homocysteine is elevated after a heart attack or cardiac arrest, rather than before it.

Folsom points out the difference between his study and previous research that links elevated homocysteine with heart disease: Unlike other investigations, his study was prospective -- it took a random sampl
'"/>

Contact: Carole Bullock
caroleb@heart.org
214-706-1279
American Heart Association
20-Jul-1998


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. Researchers determine genetic cause of Timothy syndrome
2. Researchers find color sensitive atomic switch in bacteria
3. Researchers identify protein promoting vascular tumor growth
4. Researchers devise potent new tools to curb ivory poaching
5. Researchers create nanotubes that change colors, form nanocarpet and kill bacteria
6. Researchers ID chlorophyll-regulating gene
7. Researchers develop fast track way to discover how cells are regulated
8. Researchers identify distinctive signature for metastatic prostate cancer
9. Researchers report new gene test for isolated cleft lip and palate
10. Researchers discover why mutant gene causes colon cancer
11. Researchers identify the genomes controlling elements

Post Your Comments:
*Name:
*Comment:
*Email:
TAG: Researchers Take Second Look Homocysteine Link Heart Disease

(Date:5/21/2013)... at Chicago College of Medicine will study gender differences in ... energy source -- and how changes in fat metabolism play ... 4-year grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. ... for energy. These changes may play a major role in ... and women, says E. Douglas Lewandowski, director of the UIC ...
(Date:5/21/2013)... charted the path of insulin action in cells in ... blueprint for understanding what goes wrong in diabetes. ... Professor David James from Sydney,s Garvan Institute of Medical ... of the prestigious journal Cell Metabolism . , ... very important role in the body because it helps ...
(Date:5/20/2013)... is known about the effect of physical education (PE) ... University finds that increasing the amount of time that ... of obesity. , The study represents some of the ... youth obesity, and is forthcoming in the Journal ... of the study can be viewed at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167629613000556 ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Do men's and women's hearts burn fuel differently? 2Insight into the dazzling impact of insulin in cells 2Insight into the dazzling impact of insulin in cells 3Gym class reduces probability of obesity, study finds for first time 2
(Date:5/21/2013)... May 21, 2013 Alpha Source, ... , will be exhibiting for the 13th consecutive ... Medical Instrumentation (AAMI) 2013 Conference and Expo. The ... distribute, and manufacture healthcare technologies. This year’s event ... Beach, California. , The three-day event draws ...
(Date:5/21/2013)... Raleigh, NC (PRWEB) May 21, 2013 ... and financial services company for clinical trials, announced ... Aggregate Spend Solutions, LLC. Clinverse’s ClinPay® FLS ... automated investigator payment process. SpendMD ™, ... only complete solution for tracking and reporting transfer ...
(Date:5/21/2013)... (PRWEB) May 21, 2013 As ... a strong push within the industry to deliver ... Manufacturing Organizations and pharma companies often means turning ... , Microtablets, developed in collaboration with Sensidose AB ... outsourcing can bring products to market sooner. The ...
(Date:5/21/2013)... , May 21, 2013  MacroGenics, Inc. ... study of margetuximab (MGAH22), an Fc-modified chimeric monoclonal ... expressing the HER2 oncoprotein," will be presented at ... of Clinical Oncology during the Developmental Therapeutics - ... at 4:15 – 4:30 PM.  The presentation will ...
Breaking Biology Technology:Alpha Source, Inc. to Exhibit at the AAMI 2013 Conference and Expo 2Clinverse, Inc. Announces Strategic Alliance with Aggregate Spend Solutions, LLC 2Clinverse, Inc. Announces Strategic Alliance with Aggregate Spend Solutions, LLC 3The Development of an Innovative Microtablet Dosage Form, a Success Story: Live Webinar Hosted by Xtalks 2MacroGenics Announces Margetuximab (MGAH22) Phase 1 Data Presentation at ASCO; Initiates Phase 2 Clinical Study to Evaluate Activity of Margetuximab in Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer 2MacroGenics Announces Margetuximab (MGAH22) Phase 1 Data Presentation at ASCO; Initiates Phase 2 Clinical Study to Evaluate Activity of Margetuximab in Patients with Metastatic Breast Cancer 3
Cached News: