(Circulation. 2000;101:e59.)
© 2000 American Heart Association, Inc.
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This same research group has now explored the hypothesis that hyperhomocystinemia accounts for part of the unexplained excess of coronary heart disease that affects immigrants to the United Kingdom from the Indian subcontinent (Indian Asians); they reported the results of this study at the 72nd Scientific Sessions of the American Heart Association, which were held in Atlanta, Georgia. The group recruited 551 men with proven coronary heart disease and 1025 healthy controls. About half of each group consisted of Indian Asians, and the other half was made up of Europeans; all participants lived in West London. In both racial groups, fasting homocysteine concentrations were 8% higher in cases than in controls.
As in several previous studies, the association of homocysteine levels
with coronary heart disease was independent of conventional
risk factors. Post-methionine-load homocysteine concentrations were
only 4% higher in those with coronary disease; this finding
was not influenced by race. The
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