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Are dietary choline and betaine intakes determinants of total homocysteine concentration?

Cited 33 time in Web of Science Cited 41 time in Scopus
Authors

Lee, Jung Eun; Jacques, Paul F.; Dougherty, Lauren; Selhub, Jacob; Giovannucci, Edward; Zeisel, Steven H.; Cho, Eunyoung

Issue Date
2010-05
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Citation
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION, Vol.91 No.5, pp.1303-1310
Abstract
Background: Elevated homocysteine concentrations are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease and a decline in cognitive function. Intakes of choline and betaine, as methyl donors, may affect homocysteine concentrations. Objective: The objective was to examine whether choline and betaine intakes, assessed from food-frequency questionnaires, are associated with total plasma homocysteine concentrations under both fasting and post-methionine-load conditions in both pre- and post folic acid fortification periods in the United States. Design: We assessed the association between choline and betaine intakes and fasting and post-methionine-load homocysteine concentrations using the US Department of Agriculture revised food-composition tables and evaluated whether the associations varied by folic acid fortification periods in 1325 male and 1407 female participants in the sixth examination (1995-1998) of the Framingham Offspring Study. Results: A higher choline-plus-betaine intake was associated with lower concentrations of post-methionine-load homocysteine; the multivariate geometric means were 24.1 mu mol/L (95% CI: 23.4, 24.9 mu mol/L) in the top quintile of intake and 25.0 mu mol/L (95% CI: 24.2, 25.7 mu mol/L) in the bottom quintile (P for trend = 0.01). We found an inverse association between choline-plus-betaine intake and fasting homocysteine concentrations; the multivariate geometric mean fasting homocysteine concentrations were 9.6 mu mol/L (95% CI: 9.3, 9.9 mu mol/L) in the top quintile and 10.1 mu mol/L (95% CI: 9.8, 10.4 mu mol/L) in the bottom quintile (P for trend < 0.001). When we stratified by plasma folate and vitamin B-12 concentrations, the inverse association was limited to participants with low plasma folate or vitamin B-12 concentrations. In the postfortification period, the inverse association between choline-plus-betaine intake and either fasting or post-methionine-load homocysteine was no longer present. Conclusions: Choline and betaine intakes were associated with both fasting and post-methionine-load total homocysteine concentrations, especially in participants with low folate and vitamin B-12 status. The inverse association between choline and betaine intakes and homocysteine concentrations was no longer present in the postfortification period. Am J Clin Nutr 2010; 91: 1303-10.
ISSN
0002-9165
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/208133
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.2009.28456
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  • College of Human Ecology
  • Department of Food and Nutrition
Research Area epidemiology, nutrition, nutritional epidemiology, 만성질환 예방 및 관리에 관한 영양역학 연구

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