articleJAMAFeb 3, 2004Closed access

Lowering Homocysteine in Patients With Ischemic Stroke to Prevent Recurrent Stroke, Myocardial Infarction, and Death

Wake Forest University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Objective

To determine whether high doses of folic acid, pyridoxine (vitamin B6), and cobalamin (vitamin B12), given to lower total homocysteine levels, reduce the risk of recurrent stroke over a 2-year period compared with low doses of these vitamins.

Design

Double-blind randomized controlled trial (September 1996-May 2003). SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: 3680 adults with nondisabling cerebral infarction at 56 university-affiliated hospitals, community hospitals, private neurology practices, and Veterans Affairs medical centers across the United States, Canada, and Scotland. INTERVENTIONS: All participants received best medical and surgical care plus a daily multivitamin containing the US Food and Drug Administration's reference daily intakes of other vitamins; patients were randomly assigned to receive once-daily doses of the high-dose formulation (n = 1827), containing 25 mg of pyridoxine, 0.4 mg of cobalamin, and 2.5 mg of folic acid; or the low-dose formulation (n = 1853), containing 200 microg of pyridoxine, 6 microg of cobalamin and 20 microg of folic acid. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Recurrent cerebral infarction (primary outcome); coronary heart disease (CHD) events and death (secondary outcomes).

Citation impact

1,381
total citations
FWCI
85.07
Percentile
100%
References
43
Citations per year

Authors

9

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Cobalamin
  • Stroke (engine)
  • Multivitamin
  • Homocysteine
  • Myocardial infarction
  • Internal medicine
  • Hyperhomocysteinemia
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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