Homocysteine
Homocysteine is an amino acid produced during protein metabolism. Normally, your body converts it into other beneficial substances using B vitamins (B12, B6, and folate). When these vitamins are deficient or metabolic pathways are impaired, levels build up in the blood. Elevated levels are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, blood clots, and cognitive decline — and serve as a functional indicator of B-vitamin deficiency often before standard tests become abnormal.
Homocysteine is an amino acid produced during the metabolism of methionine — a protein building block found in meat, fish, and dairy. Normally, your body converts this amino acid into other beneficial substances using B vitamins (B12, B6, and folate). When these vitamins are deficient or metabolic pathways are impaired, levels build up in the blood.
Why does testing matter? Elevated levels are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, blood clots, and cognitive decline. High values also serve as a functional indicator of B-vitamin deficiency — often detecting insufficiency before standard B12 or folate tests become abnormal. This makes the test valuable both as a cardiovascular risk marker and as a window into B-vitamin metabolism.
This blood test is particularly valuable for assessing cardiovascular risk beyond standard cholesterol testing, investigating unexplained blood clots or early heart disease, detecting functional B-vitamin deficiency, and evaluating cognitive decline in older adults. It provides unique information not captured by other common tests.
Key Benefits of Testing
This test identifies elevated levels that indicate increased cardiovascular and stroke risk — particularly valuable in patients without traditional risk factors who still develop heart disease. It’s an independent risk factor that standard lipid panels don’t capture.
Testing also reveals functional B-vitamin status. Because B12, folate, and B6 are required to metabolize this amino acid, elevated levels often indicate deficiency of one or more of these vitamins — sometimes before serum vitamin levels appear abnormal. This makes it an early warning system for B-vitamin insufficiency that affects the nervous system, blood cell production, and overall health.
What Does This Test Measure?
The test measures the concentration of this sulfur-containing amino acid in your blood. It’s not obtained directly from food — rather, it’s produced as an intermediate when your body processes methionine from dietary protein.
How Your Body Processes This Amino Acid
Two main pathways eliminate this amino acid from the blood:
Remethylation pathway: Converts it back to methionine using folate and vitamin B12. This is the primary pathway and recycles the amino acid for reuse.
Transsulfuration pathway: Converts it to cysteine (another amino acid) using vitamin B6. This pathway eliminates excess when levels are high.
When either pathway is impaired — due to vitamin deficiency or genetic variations — levels accumulate in the blood.
Why Elevated Levels Are Harmful
High concentrations damage blood vessel walls, promote oxidative stress, increase inflammation, impair nitric oxide production (which relaxes blood vessels), and promote blood clot formation. These effects accelerate atherosclerosis and increase thrombotic risk. The amino acid may also be directly toxic to neurons, contributing to cognitive decline.
The MTHFR Connection
The MTHFR gene provides instructions for an enzyme crucial in folate metabolism and the remethylation pathway. Common genetic variants (particularly C677T and A1298C) reduce enzyme efficiency, potentially causing elevated levels — especially when folate intake is low. People with these variants may need more folate to maintain normal levels.
Why This Test Matters
Cardiovascular Risk Assessment
Elevated levels are an independent risk factor for coronary artery disease, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease. This testing adds value beyond standard cholesterol panels, particularly for patients with heart disease despite “normal” lipids or with family history of early cardiovascular events.
Thrombosis Risk
High levels increase risk of blood clots — both venous (deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism) and arterial. Testing is valuable when investigating unexplained clotting events, especially in younger patients without other risk factors.
Functional B-Vitamin Status
Levels rise when B12, folate, or B6 is insufficient for proper metabolism. This often detects functional deficiency before serum vitamin levels appear low — making it a sensitive indicator of B-vitamin inadequacy affecting cellular processes.
Cognitive Health
Elevated levels are associated with increased risk of cognitive decline, dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease. While causation isn’t definitively proven, this association makes testing relevant in evaluating cognitive symptoms, especially in older adults.
Pregnancy Health
High levels during pregnancy are associated with complications including neural tube defects, preeclampsia, and pregnancy loss. Adequate folate (which lowers levels) is crucial during pregnancy.
What Can Affect Your Levels?
Causes of Elevated Levels
B-vitamin deficiency: The most common cause. Deficiency of B12, folate, or B6 impairs the metabolic pathways that clear this amino acid.
MTHFR genetic variants: Common polymorphisms reduce enzyme efficiency, raising levels — especially when folate intake is low.
Kidney disease: Impaired kidney function reduces clearance, causing accumulation.
Hypothyroidism: Underactive thyroid slows metabolism of this amino acid.
Certain medications: Methotrexate, anticonvulsants (phenytoin, carbamazepine), and nitrous oxide can raise levels by interfering with B-vitamin metabolism.
Age: Levels tend to increase with age due to declining kidney function and B-vitamin absorption.
Lifestyle factors: Smoking, excessive coffee consumption, and high alcohol intake are associated with elevated levels.
High methionine diet: Very high protein intake (particularly red meat) provides more substrate for production.
Causes of Low Levels
Low levels are not typically concerning and may simply reflect good B-vitamin status and efficient metabolism.
Testing Considerations
Fasting is generally recommended — levels can rise after protein-rich meals. Blood samples should be processed promptly as levels can increase if samples sit at room temperature. Recent B-vitamin supplementation will affect results.
When Should You Get Tested?
Cardiovascular Risk Assessment
Consider testing if you have: premature heart disease or stroke (before age 55 in men, 65 in women), heart disease despite normal cholesterol, strong family history of cardiovascular disease, or want comprehensive cardiovascular risk evaluation beyond standard lipids.
Unexplained Blood Clots
If you’ve had venous thromboembolism (DVT, pulmonary embolism) or arterial clots without clear cause — especially at young age — testing helps identify this as a contributing factor.
B-Vitamin Deficiency Evaluation
If B12 or folate deficiency is suspected — neurological symptoms, anemia, vegetarian/vegan diet, malabsorption conditions — this test assesses functional status and may detect insufficiency before serum vitamins appear low.
Cognitive Concerns
In evaluation of cognitive decline or dementia, testing can identify an elevated level as a potentially modifiable risk factor.
MTHFR Variant Monitoring
If you have known MTHFR variants, periodic testing monitors whether your B-vitamin intake is sufficient to maintain healthy levels.
Pregnancy Planning
For women planning pregnancy, especially those with history of pregnancy complications or neural tube defects, testing helps ensure levels are optimal before conception.
Understanding Your Results
Your lab provides reference ranges. General interpretation:
Optimal: Lower portion of normal range. Associated with lowest cardiovascular risk and indicates efficient B-vitamin metabolism.
Normal: Within reference range. Generally reassuring, though some research suggests lower is better for cardiovascular risk.
Mildly elevated: Modestly above reference range. Indicates increased cardiovascular risk and likely B-vitamin insufficiency. Usually responsive to B-vitamin supplementation.
Significantly elevated: Well above reference range. Requires thorough evaluation for cause (severe B-vitamin deficiency, kidney disease, genetic factors). Greater cardiovascular risk; warrants intervention.
Context Matters
Interpret results alongside B12, folate, and kidney function tests. If elevated, identifying the cause guides treatment:
Elevated + Low B12: B12 deficiency is the primary cause
Elevated + Low folate: Folate deficiency is the primary cause
Elevated + Normal B vitamins: Consider MTHFR variants, kidney function, other causes
Elevated + Kidney disease: Impaired clearance contributing
What to Do About Elevated Levels
B-Vitamin Supplementation
The most common and effective treatment is B-vitamin supplementation — folate, B12, and sometimes B6. This addresses the most frequent cause (B-vitamin insufficiency) and reliably lowers levels in most people.
Folate/Folic acid: Essential for the remethylation pathway. Some people with MTHFR variants may benefit from methylfolate (active form) rather than folic acid.
Vitamin B12: Required for remethylation. Ensure adequate intake, especially if deficient or at risk (vegetarian/vegan, older adults, malabsorption).
Vitamin B6: Supports the transsulfuration pathway. May be added if levels don’t normalize with folate and B12 alone.
Dietary Improvements
Increase folate-rich foods: leafy greens, legumes, fortified grains. Ensure adequate B12: meat, fish, eggs, dairy, or supplements if plant-based. Moderate protein intake if very high. Reduce alcohol and smoking.
Address Underlying Conditions
Treat hypothyroidism if present. Optimize kidney function management. Review medications that may be contributing.
Monitoring
Retest after 2-3 months of treatment to confirm improvement. Once normalized, periodic monitoring ensures levels remain optimal.
A Note on Cardiovascular Outcomes
While lowering elevated levels with B vitamins is straightforward and reduces a known risk factor, clinical trials have not consistently shown that treatment reduces cardiovascular events. This doesn’t mean testing is unhelpful — elevated levels still identify increased risk and B-vitamin deficiency. But cardiovascular risk reduction requires comprehensive management including lipids, blood pressure, lifestyle, and other factors.
Related Health Conditions
Cardiovascular Disease
Heart Disease and Stroke: Elevated levels are an independent risk factor. Testing helps identify this modifiable risk.
Blood Clots
Venous Thromboembolism: High levels increase clotting risk. Important in evaluation of unexplained clots.
B-Vitamin Deficiency
B12 and Folate Deficiency: Testing serves as functional indicator of B-vitamin status, detecting insufficiency early.
Cognitive Decline
Dementia and Alzheimer’s: Elevated levels associated with increased risk of cognitive decline.
Pregnancy Complications
Neural Tube Defects: Folate deficiency (reflected in high levels) increases risk. Adequate folate is essential preconception and during pregnancy.
Why Regular Testing Matters
For those with known elevated levels or risk factors (MTHFR variants, cardiovascular disease, B-vitamin deficiency history), periodic testing monitors whether interventions are effective and levels remain optimal. Changes in diet, medications, or health status can affect levels over time.
As part of comprehensive cardiovascular risk assessment, this test provides information not captured by standard lipid panels — helping identify risk factors that would otherwise go undetected.
Related Biomarkers Often Tested Together
Vitamin B12 — Required for metabolism of this amino acid. Deficiency is a primary cause of elevated levels.
Folate — Essential for the remethylation pathway. Deficiency raises levels.
hs-CRP — Inflammation marker. Combined with this test, provides comprehensive cardiovascular risk assessment.
Lipid Panel — Standard cardiovascular markers. This test complements lipid testing for complete risk picture.
Creatinine — Kidney function affects clearance. Important context for interpretation.
Note: Information provided in this article is for educational purposes and doesn’t replace personalized medical advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
It’s an amino acid produced during protein metabolism. Your body normally converts it to other substances using B vitamins. When levels build up — usually due to B-vitamin deficiency — it damages blood vessels and increases cardiovascular and clotting risk. Testing identifies this modifiable risk factor.
Elevated levels are associated with increased cardiovascular risk, but causation is debated. High levels may be a marker of underlying problems (B-vitamin deficiency, kidney disease) rather than a direct cause. Regardless, elevated levels identify increased risk and often indicate correctable B-vitamin insufficiency.
B-vitamin supplementation reliably lowers elevated levels. However, clinical trials haven’t consistently shown this reduces heart attacks or strokes. This doesn’t mean testing is useless — it identifies a risk factor and B-vitamin deficiency. But cardiovascular prevention requires comprehensive management, not just this one marker.
B-vitamin deficiency (B12, folate, B6) is the most common cause. Other factors include MTHFR genetic variants, kidney disease, hypothyroidism, certain medications, aging, smoking, and high alcohol intake.
MTHFR testing isn’t routinely necessary. If your level is elevated, the treatment is the same regardless of MTHFR status — B-vitamin supplementation. MTHFR testing might be considered if levels don’t respond to supplementation or for family planning purposes.
B12 and folate are required for the pathway that converts this amino acid back to methionine. B6 is needed for the pathway that converts it to cysteine. Supplementing these vitamins enhances both pathways, reducing accumulation.
Fasting is generally recommended since protein-rich meals can temporarily raise levels. Morning fasting samples provide the most reliable results.
For initial assessment: once. If elevated and treating: retest after 2-3 months to confirm improvement. For ongoing monitoring with known elevation or risk factors: periodically as guided by your healthcare provider.
References
Key Sources:
- Ganguly P, Alam SF. Role of homocysteine in the development of cardiovascular disease. Nutr J. 2015;14:6.
- Refsum H, et al. Homocysteine and cardiovascular disease. Annu Rev Med. 1998;49:31-62.
- Martí-Carvajal AJ, et al. Homocysteine-lowering interventions for preventing cardiovascular events. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;8(8):CD006612.