scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers by "Arno G. Motulsky published in 1995"


Journal ArticleDOI
04 Oct 1995-JAMA
TL;DR: Higher folic acid intake by reducing tHcy levels promises to prevent arteriosclerotic vascular disease and under different assumptions, 13,500 to 50,000 CAD deaths annually could be avoided.
Abstract: Objective. —To determine the risk of elevated total homocysteine (tHcy) levels for arteriosclerotic vascular disease, estimate the reduction of tHcy by folic acid, and calculate the potential reduction of coronary artery disease (CAD) mortality by increasing folic acid intake. Data Sources. —MEDLINE search for meta-analysis of 27 studies relating homocysteine to arteriosclerotic vascular disease and 11 studies of folic acid effects on tHcy levels. Study Selection and Data Extraction. —Studies dealing with CAD, cerebrovascular disease, and peripheral arterial vascular disease were selected. Three prospective and six population-based case-control studies were considered of high quality. Five cross-sectional and 13 other case-control studies were also included. Causality of tHcy's role in the pathogenesis of vascular disease was inferred because of consistency across studies by different investigators using different methods in different populations. Data Synthesis. —Elevations in tHcy were considered an independent graded risk factor for arteriosclerotic vascular diseases. The odds ratio (OR) for CAD of a 5-μmol/L tHcy increment is 1.6(95% confidence interval [Cl], 1.4 to 1.7) for men and 1.8 (95% Cl, 1.3 to 1.9) for women. A total of 10% of the population's CAD risk appears attributable to tHcy. The OR for cerebrovascular disease (5-μmol/L tHcy increment) is 1.5 (95% Cl, 1.3 to 1.9). Peripheral arterial disease also showed a strong association. Increased folic acid intake (approximately 200 μg/d) reduces tHcy levels by approximately 4 μmol/L. Assuming that lower tHcy levels decrease CAD mortality, we calculated the effect of (1) increased dietary folate, (2) supplementation by tablets, and (3) grain fortification. Under different assumptions, 13 500 to 50 000 CAD deaths annually could be avoided; fortification of food had the largest impact. Conclusions. —A 5-μmol/L tHcy increment elevates CAD risk by as much as cholesterol increases of 0.5 mmol/L (20 mg/dL). Higher folic acid intake by reducing tHcy levels promises to prevent arteriosclerotic vascular disease. Clinical trials are urgently needed. Concerns about masking cobalamin deficiency by folic acid could be lessened by adding 1 mg of cobalamin to folic acid supplements. ( JAMA . 1995;274:1049-1057)

3,722 citations


Journal ArticleDOI

135 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The red-green pigment gene arrays of 203 randomly selected men of Japanese ancestry from the Seattle area were screened for the abnormal molecular patterns that are usually associated with defective color vision, and exon 3 of the red and green pigment genes was observed to be a hot spot for recombination and gene conversion.
Abstract: The red-green pigment gene arrays of 203 (101 from a previous study and 102 from this study) randomly selected men of Japanese ancestry from the Seattle area were screened for the abnormal molecular patterns (deletions and red/green or green/red hybrid genes) that are usually associated with defective color vision. Such molecular patterns were found in approximately 5% of these individuals, which is equivalent to the frequency of phenotypic color vision defects in Japanese males in Japan. Thus, the majority of hybrid genes carried by Japanese males appear to be associated with defective color vision. In contrast, the frequency of hybrid genes among Caucasians and African-Americans is approximately two and five times the frequency of color vision defects in these two ethnic groups, respectively. The coding sequences of 50 males of Japanese ancestry were determined. All the polymorphisms in the red and green pigment genes that were detected in the Japanese sample had been observed in Caucasians and African-Americans. The same polymorphisms of the red pigment gene were present in the green pigment gene, suggesting that gene conversion contributes to sequence homogenization between these pigment genes. As is the case for Caucasians, exon 3 of the red and green pigment genes was observed to be a hot spot for recombination and gene conversion. Fewer polymorphic sites (4 vs 11) and haplotypes (5 vs 14) of the red pigment gene were observed in Japanese than in Caucasians. The Japanese population was more uniform with respect to the red pigment gene, with 70% of individuals having the same haplotype, as compared with the 43% for the Caucasian population. This difference was largely due to the lower degree of polymorphism at position 180 of the red pigment gene in Japanese (84% Ser and 16% Ala vs 62% Ser and 38% Ala.) The number of polymorphic sites and haplotypes in the green pigment gene was similar in the two populations. Nevertheless, the Japanese population was more uniform with 65% having the same haplotype. The difference in the frequency of alleles at position 283 accounted for this difference in haplotype distribution.

12 citations


Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1995
TL;DR: This work tested the hypothesis that chromatic discrimination depends upon the difference between spectra of the normal and hybrid pigments in the array and suggested more severe abnormalities in color vision when normal and Hybrid pigments had very similar spectra.
Abstract: Certain protans have gene arrays comprised of L-M hybrid genes and one or more normal M-pigment genes, and certain deutans have arrays containing M-L hybrids in addition to normal L pigment genes. We tested the hypothesis that chromatic discrimination depends upon the difference between spectra of the normal and hybrid pigments in the array. We suggested more severe abnormalities in color vision when normal and hybrid pigments had very similar spectra.

3 citations