Cysteine is a cardiovascular risk factor in hyperlipidemic patients
- PMID: 10487486
- DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9150(99)00128-8
Cysteine is a cardiovascular risk factor in hyperlipidemic patients
Abstract
Several studies have reported that moderate hyperhomocysteinemia is related to an increased risk for atherosclerosis, but few data are available with regard to any other thiol compound having a potential vascular toxicity. Therefore, we measured both total cysteine and homocysteine plasma levels in patients with hyperlipidemia (242 males and 147 females, 41-65 years old). Homocysteine was higher in males than in females, 13.2+/-4.1 versus 11.1+/-3.4 micromol/l (P<0.0001). The mean cysteine level was 243.3+/-45.7 micromol/l in the whole study population. The subjects were split in two groups, symptomatic patients with cardiovascular disease (n = 106) and asymptomatic subjects (n = 283). Blood pressure, smoking status, total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol and triglycerides did not statistically differ between groups, but the mean HDL-cholesterol level was lower in symptomatic patients (1.24+/-0.38 versus 1.42+/-0.41, P<0.0001). Cysteine levels were higher in patients with cardiovascular disease than in asymptomatic patients, respectively 254.7+/-47.7 versus 239.1+/-44.3 micromol/l (P = 0.003). A similar result was found for homocysteine, respectively 13.1+/-4.3 versus 12.2+/-3.9 micromol/l (P = 0.05). To analyse whether cysteine levels were related to atherosclerosis independently of age, adjusted levels were compared between asymptomatic patients with normal carotid arteries (n = 176), carotid atherosclerosis (n = 107) and symptomatic patients (n = 106). Age adjusted cysteine levels differed significantly between groups (P = 0.027) while the P-value was of borderline significance for homocysteine (P = 0.09). Odds ratios for having symptomatic cardiovascular disease were 1.81 (95% CI, 1.02-3.21) and 2.05 (95% CI, 1.16-3.60) for the mid and highest tertiles of cysteine using the lowest as the reference. After adjustment in a multivariate model including age, sex, and creatinine, the odds ratio for disease remained significant between the highest tertile versus the lowest (OR = 1.89). Adjusted odds ratios were found to be weaker when homocysteine tertiles were compared. Our data suggest that plasma total cysteine is a risk factor for atherosclerosis in hyperlipidemic patients.
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