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Homocysteine, B Vitamins, and Cognitive Impairment.

A David Smith, Helga Refsum
Review Annual review of nutrition 2016 432 次引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究类型
Review
研究人群
Cognitively impaired individuals (homocysteine)
干预措施
Homocysteine, B Vitamins, and Cognitive Impairment. None
对照组
None
主要结局
None
效应方向
Mixed
偏倚风险
Unclear

Abstract

Moderately elevated plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) is a strong modifiable risk factor for vascular dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Prospectively, elevated tHcy is associated with cognitive decline, white matter damage, brain atrophy, neurofibrillary tangles, and dementia. Most homocysteine-lowering trials with folate and vitamins B6 and/or B12 tested as protective agents against cognitive decline were poorly designed by including subjects unlikely to benefit during the trial period. In contrast, trials in high-risk subjects, which have taken into account the baseline B vitamin status, show a slowing of cognitive decline and of atrophy in critical brain regions, results that are consistent with modification of the Alzheimer's disease process. Homocysteine may interact with both risk factors and protective factors, thereby identifying people at risk but also providing potential strategies for early intervention. Public health steps to slow cognitive decline should be promoted in individuals who are at risk of dementia, and more trials are needed to see if simple interventions with nutrients can prevent progression to dementia.

简要概述

Trials in high-risk subjects, which have taken into account the baseline B vitamin status, show a slowing of cognitive decline and of atrophy in critical brain regions, results that are consistent with modification of the Alzheimer's disease process.

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