Diagnostic significance of mild hyperhomocysteinemia in a population of children with parents or grandparents who have peripheral or coronary artery disease

1999 
BACKGROUND: A rise of the homocysteine plasma level--mild hyperhomocysteinaemia--is considered an independent risk factor for the development of vascular damage. It is due to hereditary deficiency of 5,10-methylene-tetrahydrofolate reductase with accentuation of vitamin deficiency (folic acid, vitamin B6 and B12). In previous studies the authors confirmed this fact in the population of patients with aortocoronary or peripheral arterial bypasses. The assumed autosomal recessive transmission of this deficiency should make it possible to detect carriers of this metabolic deviation already in childhood. By selective screening of the child population at risk it would thus be possible to detect affected subjects in time and prevent the development of vascular disease by preventive folate administration. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a group of 38 children and grandchildren from risk families where at least one of the parents or grandparents was operated on account of vascular obliterating disease the total homocysteine plasma level was examined by the chromatographic method. An increase of total homocystein (8.7 +/- 2.7 mumol/l) was found as compared with children from the non-risk population (5.4 +/- 1.8 mumol/l), (p < 0.001). The total homocysteine values however were dependent on the child's age and were more marked in children above 12 years of age. In the parental population mild hyperhomocysteinaemia was present in 38% of those with aortocoronary bypasses and in 43% of those with peripheral arterial bypasses. CONCLUSIONS: The authors found significantly elevated total homocysteine levels in the child population from risk families with obliterating vascular disease. The total homocysteine level depends on the child's age and is more markedly expressed in children above 12 years of age.
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