For more than 30 years, mild to moderate hyperhomocysteinaemia either fasting or after methionine loading have been placed by some authors to independent risks of atherosclerotic vascular disease. The methionine-loading test consistes in the peroral administration of 100 mg of methionine (precursor of homocysteine) per kilogram.
The plasma total homocysteine is measured before and 4-8 hours after ingestion of methionine. No significant adverse effects of the methionine administration was described yet.
A normal range of fasting homocysteine and concentration after a methionine-loading test is defined by an arbitrary cut-off in the distribution of concentrations found in the normal population and depends on age and sex. It is recomended to measure homocysteine levels after a methionine-loading test in high-risk patients with normal basal homocysteine levels.
If the prospective studies confirm the causality between atherosclerosis and homocysteine will be the measurement of fasting homocysteine and homocysteine after a standardised methionine-loading test an unprententious test for determination of non-conventional vascular risk.