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Oral anticoagulant treatment with coumarin derivatives does not influence plasma homocysteine concentration
- Source :
- European Journal of Internal Medicine, 17, 2, pp. 120-4, European Journal of Internal Medicine, 17, 120-4
- Publication Year :
- 2006
-
Abstract
- Contains fulltext : 49651.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Closed access) BACKGROUND: High circulating levels of homocysteine are a risk factor for arterial and venous thrombosis. This association has been established in numerous case-control studies. In some of these studies, patients were treated with anticoagulants at the time of venapuncture. It is not clear whether homocysteine concentrations are influenced by anticoagulants. If anticoagulation does, indeed, have an effect on homocysteine levels, it might underestimate or overestimate the possible association of homocysteine levels and vascular disease. METHODS: In this study we used two different groups to investigate the effect of coumarin derivatives on homocysteine concentrations. Homocysteine levels were measured in 40 patients who were on the waiting list for orthopedic surgery and who were expected to receive prophylactic anticoagulant therapy after the operation. Measurements were taken before the operation, as well as during and after coumarin therapy. Homocysteine concentrations were also measured in a second study group consisting of 12 healthy volunteers who were treated with oral anticoagulants. RESULTS: Mean homocysteine concentrations increased by 6% (95% CI 2-10%) during the treatment with coumarin derivatives. This corresponds to a 1 mumol/L increase in homocysteine concentration. After the anticoagulant treatment period, the concentrations decreased again. We determined that this slight increase does not influence the interpretation of epidemiological studies. We also observed no significant effect of anticoagulants on homocysteine concentration after 13 weeks of treatment of healthy volunteers (decrease of 3.6%, or approximately 0.6 micromol/L; 95% CI -17.5-8.5%). CONCLUSION: We conclude that anticoagulation does not influence homocysteine concentrations to any significant degree.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Health aging / healthy living [IGMD 5]
Homocysteine
Energy and redox metabolism [NCMLS 4]
Vascular medicine and diabetes [UMCN 2.2]
Gastroenterology
Molecular epidemiology [NCEBP 1]
chemistry.chemical_compound
Translational research [ONCOL 3]
Internal medicine
Internal Medicine
Determinants in Health and Disease [EBP 1]
Medicine
Risk factor
Cardiovascular diseases [NCEBP 14]
business.industry
Vascular disease
Endocrinology and reproduction [UMCN 5.2]
Hormonal regulation [IGMD 6]
medicine.disease
Coumarin
Surgery
Venous thrombosis
Anticoagulant therapy
chemistry
Oral anticoagulant
Plasma homocysteine
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 09536205
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- European Journal of Internal Medicine, 17, 2, pp. 120-4, European Journal of Internal Medicine, 17, 120-4
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b319f4fe1931dbfff4eee63b322c01e8