Objective: Metabolic study on plasmatic levels of homocysteine (Hcy) in healthy women during normal or pathological pregnancy accompanied with corresponding levels of Hcy in amniotic fluid and foetal sera. Increased levels of Hcy--hyperhomocysteinaemia is respected as an independent risk factor accelerating the early development of vessel damage and causing the neural tube defects (NTD).
Design: Basic study to get our own data about Hcy in Czech healthy and population at risk of pregnant and non-pregnant women.
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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Elevated total homocysteine plasma levels are considered a significant factor of vascular damage. As they are encountered in more than half the patients with atherosclerotic vascular damage the importance as a lipid-dependent or lipid-independent risk factor in the promotion of pathophysiological processes is discussed.
Methods And Results: In a group of 100 healthy subjects and 529 patients with indication for an aortocoronary or peripheral arterial bypass and in patients from the lipid clinic the mutual relation between total plasma homocysteine levels and selected indicators of the lipid metabolism was investigated.