精神病初发患者的同型半胱氨酸水平

Ning Fan, Wenxuan Zhao, Yajun Yun, Luyuan Bai, Huimei An, Qi Zhang, Jiangling Yan, Fengmei Fan, Xiaole Han, Fude Yang
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摘要

高同型半胱氨酸(Hcy)水平是精神分裂症、抑郁症和躁狂症的一个危险因素。然而,高同型半胱氨酸血症是导致特定精神症状或精神障碍的独立因素还是辅助因素,目前仍不清楚。本研究旨在检测具有精神病症状和各种精神疾病的首发住院患者的 Hcy 水平,以阐明 Hcy 水平与精神疾病之间的关联。本研究共招募了 191 名精神病患者(18-40 岁)。其中 75 名患者被诊断为精神分裂症,48 名患者被诊断为急性和短暂性精神病,36 名患者被诊断为躁狂发作伴精神病,32 名患者被诊断为重度抑郁发作伴精神病,56 名患者为健康对照组。血清 Hcy 水平采用酶循环法进行测量。Hcy 浓度大于 15 μmol/L 即为高同型半胱氨酸血症。与健康对照组相比,首发精神病患者的 Hcy 水平明显更高(5.99 ± 3.60 vs. 19.78 ± 16.61 vs. 15.50 ± 9.08 vs. 20.00 ± 11.33 vs. 16.22 ± 12.06,F = 12.778,P < 0.001)。男性精神分裂症患者、急性和短暂性精神障碍患者以及重度抑郁障碍患者的 Hcy 水平明显较高,但躁狂症患者的 Hcy 水平不高[精神分裂症,(t = -4.727,P < 0.001);急性和短暂性精神病性障碍,(t = -3.389,P = 0.001);重度抑郁发作伴精神病,(t = -3.796,P < 0.001);躁狂发作伴精神病,(t = -1.684,P = 0.101)]。然而,血清 Hcy 水平在各精神障碍组间无显著差异(F = 0.139,P = 0.968)。多变量线性回归显示,男性患同型半胱氨酸血症的风险增加。(95% CI = 8.192-15.370, P < 0.001)。这些结果表明,精神病初发患者的 Hcy 水平高于普通人群,而男性患精神病的风险更大。总之,Hcy水平升高可能是首发精神病患者的发病机制之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Homocysteine levels in first-episode patients with psychiatric disorders
A high homocysteine (Hcy) level is a risk factor for schizophrenia, depression, and bipolar disorder. However, the role of hyperhomocysteinemia as either an independent factor or an auxiliary contributor to specific psychiatric symptoms or disorders remains unclear. This study aimed to examine Hcy levels in first-episode inpatients with psychotic symptoms and various psychiatric diseases to elucidate the association between Hcy levels and psychiatric disorders. This study enrolled 191 patients (aged 18–40 years) with psychiatric disorders. Seventy-five patients were diagnosed with schizophrenia, 48 with acute and transient psychotic disorders, 36 with manic episodes with psychosis, 32 with major depressive episodes with psychosis, and 56 healthy controls. Serum Hcy levels were measured using the enzyme cycle method. A Hcy concentration level of > 15 μmol/L was defined as hyperhomocysteinemia. Hcy levels were significantly higher in first-episode patients with psychiatric disorders compared to healthy controls (5.99 ± 3.60 vs. 19.78 ± 16.61 vs. 15.50 ± 9.08 vs. 20.00 ± 11.33 vs. 16.22 ± 12.06, F = 12.778, P < 0.001). Hcy levels were significantly higher in males with schizophrenia, acute and transient psychotic disorder, and major depressive disorder but not in mania [schizophrenia, (t = -4.727, P < 0.001); acute and transient psychotic disorders, (t = -3.389, P = 0.001); major depressive episode with psychosis, (t = -3.796, P < 0.001); manic episodes with psychosis, (t = -1.684, P = 0.101)]. However, serum Hcy levels were not significantly different among the psychiatric disorder groups (F = 0.139, P = 0.968). Multivariate linear regression showed that males had an increased risk for homocysteinemia. (95% CI = 8.192–15.370, P < 0.001). These results suggest that first-episode patients with psychiatric disorders have higher Hcy levels than in the general population, and men are at greater risk for psychiatric disorders. In conclusion, elevated Hcy levels may contribute to the pathogenesis of first-episode patients with psychotic symptoms.
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