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Diabetes Care, Vol 21, Issue 11 1843-1847, Copyright © 1998 by American Diabetes Association
Plasma homocysteine concentrations in patients with type 1 diabetes
CC Cronin, JM McPartlin, DG Barry, JB Ferriss, JM Scott and DG Weir
Department of Medicine, University Hospital and National University of Ireland, Cork.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the plasma concentration of total homocysteine
(tHcy), a recognized risk factor for vascular disease, in patients with
type 1 diabetes and to examine the relationships with age, sex, duration of
diabetes, microvascular complications and neuropathy, and folic acid
concentration. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Plasma tHcy and folic acid
concentrations were measured in a randomly selected cohort of type 1
diabetic patients (n = 119), well characterized as regards microvascular
complications, and in a matched control group (n = 51). RESULTS: Plasma
tHcy was higher in male than in female control subjects (geometric mean
[95% CI]: 9.3 [8.0-10.9] vs. 6.1 [5.2-7.2] micromol/l, P < 0.001), as
previously described, but there was no sex difference in diabetic patients.
Plasma tHcy significantly correlated with age in patients (r = 0.348, P
< 0.01) but not in control subjects (r = 0.007, P = 0.96). Male patients
without microvascular complications had lower plasma tHcy concentrations
than did male control subjects (6.2 [5.1-7.5] vs. 9.3 [8.0-10.9]
micromol/l, P < 0.001), but values in female patients without
complications were similar to those of female control subjects. Plasma
folic acid concentration was higher in diabetic patients than in control
subjects. The expected negative association between plasma tHcy and folic
acid was stronger in control subjects than in patients. CONCLUSIONS:
Subnormal tHcy concentrations in male patients, the absence of a sex
difference, and the positive association with age indicate that
homocysteine metabolism differs between type 1 diabetic patients and
control subjects. Homocysteine is unlikely to be of pathogenic significance
in patients, particularly male subjects, with early microvascular disease
and/or neuropathy.

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Copyright © 1998 by the American Diabetes Association.
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