[The level of circulating humanin in patients with ischemic heart disease.].
Zhloba. A A AA; Subbotina. T F TF; Molchan. N S NS; Polushin. Yu S YS
Key Findings
- Humanin levels are about 4‑5 times lower in coronary heart disease patients than in healthy people
- Humanin levels decline with age (negative correlation)
- Patients show higher lactate and lower homoarginine, indicating reduced mitochondrial aerobic metabolism
Practical Outcomes
- While the study doesn’t test any treatments, it suggests that blood humanin could be a useful marker of mitochondrial health for those tracking heart and metabolic risk. Biohackers might consider monitoring humanin (if available) and focusing on proven ways to support mitochondria, such as exercise, NAD+ precursors, or targeted nutrients, rather than expecting a direct humanin supplement benefit from this data.
Summary
People with blocked heart arteries have much lower levels of a tiny protein called humanin in their blood, and the amount drops as they get older. This low humanin goes along with higher lactate and lower homoarginine, signs that the cells' energy factories (mitochondria) aren’t working well.
Abstract
At present, great interest is caused with evaluation of new markers in blood circulation for the estimation a tissue oxidative metabolism disturbance due to the presence of secondary mitochondrial dysfunction in patients with coronary heart disease. Сoronary heart disease is generally accompanied with a decline in mitochondrial respiration and represents the root cause of metabolic abnormalities in tissues. To gain insight into rate of decline of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in tissues there were proposed humanin as a new marker. The content of humanin in compare with other markers of energy metabolism in 59 patients with coronary heart disease was studied. In the examined patients, a decrease in the level of humanin up to 250 ng/l was observed when compared with its level of 1110 (800 to 1500) ng/l in healthy individuals. In most of the patients increased level of lactic acid from 1.0 to 2.2 mM accompanied in 45 % cases with elevation of pyruvic acid concentration above 99.1 μM was observed. Also, it was found a significant decrease of homoarginine level down to 1.40 (1.0-2.0) versus 2.3 (1.8-3.1) μM in healthy individuals. We found an inverse correlation between the level of humanin and the age of patients (R = -0.35, p = 0.048). It can be concluded that patients with coronary heart disease are characterized by a lower level of humanin and homoarginine in the blood, as well as an increased content of lactic acid, indicators that are the criteria for inhibiting aerobic pathways and reducing mitochondriogenesis.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
10.18821/0869-2084-2018-63-8-466-470
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