Methylmalonic acid (MMA) and homocysteine are important metabolic biomarkers in cognitive risk assessment, particularly in relation to vitamin B12 status and brain health:
Methylmalonic Acid (MMA)
- MMA is a sensitive marker of vitamin B12 deficiency. Elevated MMA levels indicate insufficient B12 activity at a cellular level.
- High serum MMA levels are independently associated with poorer cognitive performance and accelerated cognitive decline, even when vitamin B12 levels appear normal.
- MMA accumulation can contribute directly to neurological damage and is correlated with lower global cognition and episodic memory.
- Studies show a dose-dependent decline in cognitive scores with increasing MMA concentrations above about 170 nmol/L.
- MMA may not be an independent risk factor alone but often serves as a surrogate marker linked to other factors affecting cognition.sciencedirect+4
Homocysteine
- Elevated plasma homocysteine (tHcy) is a strong, modifiable risk factor for cognitive impairment, vascular dementia, and Alzheimer’s disease.
- High homocysteine levels correlate with cognitive decline, white matter brain damage, brain atrophy, and neurofibrillary tangles.
- Mechanistically, homocysteine induces cerebrovascular damage and inflammation, promoting microhemorrhages and cognitive deficits.
- Hyperhomocysteinemia typically defined as >15 µmol/L, is linked to impairments in memory, language, executive function, and overall cognition.
- Clinical trials suggest lowering homocysteine with B vitamins may slow cognitive decline in at-risk populations.frontiersin+4
Summary
- Elevated MMA signals functional B12 deficiency and is associated with worse cognitive outcomes.
- Elevated homocysteine contributes to vascular and inflammatory brain damage, increasing dementia risk.
- Both biomarkers add important information beyond serum B12 and are useful for early detection of cognitive impairment risk, guiding potential nutritional interventions.annualreviews+2
This combined assessment can improve precision in identifying those at higher risk of cognitive decline and dementia due to nutrient-related metabolic dysfunction.
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