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Also reported in: umol/L, mg/L
Your homocysteine is within normal limits. While optimal is below 10, this level does not represent significant cardiovascular or neurological risk.
Very low homocysteine has no known harmful effects and simply means your methylation biochemistry is running very efficiently. This is generally a highly favorable finding.
No action needed. This is a very favorable result.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — very low (ref: optimal <10)Very low homocysteine indicates excellent B-vitamin status and efficient methylation biochemistry. Low homocysteine is associated with reduced cardiovascular and neurological disease risk.
Excellent finding. No action needed.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — lowLow homocysteine reflects healthy B12, B6, and folate levels supporting efficient methionine metabolism. This is associated with lower artery damage risk.
No action needed.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — lowYour homocysteine is within normal limits. While optimal is below 10, this level does not represent significant cardiovascular or neurological risk.
No action needed. Continue maintaining adequate B12, B6, and folate intake.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — within reference range (<12 mcmol/L)Homocysteine below 10 mcmol/L is the target level associated with the lowest risk of cardiovascular disease and cognitive decline. Your B-vitamin status is well-maintained.
Excellent result. Continue a balanced diet with adequate B12, B6, and folate.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — optimal (<10 mcmol/L)Homocysteine between 10–12 mcmol/L is borderline elevated. At this level, it acts as a mild inflammatory agent that can slowly damage artery walls and nerves. B12, B6, and folate deficiency are the most common may contribute to.
Take a B-complex supplement containing methylfolate, methylcobalamin (B12), and pyridoxal-5-phosphate (B6). Eat more leafy greens, legumes, and fish. Retest in 3 months.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — borderline elevated (10–12 mcmol/L)Elevated homocysteine is a strong independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease, stroke, dementia, and kidney disease. It directly injures the inner lining of arteries and promotes blood clotting. B-vitamin deficiency (B12, B6, folate), kidney disease, thyroid problems, and genetics (MTHFR variants) are common may contribute to.
See your doctor. Test B12, folate, and MTHFR gene variants. Supplement with methylcobalamin (B12), methylfolate, and B6. Lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol, sedentary lifestyle) also raise homocysteine.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — elevated (12–15 mcmol/L)A very high homocysteine represents noticeable hyperhomocysteinemia — strongly associated with very high cardiovascular disease risk, dementia, stroke, blood clots, and kidney damage. At this level, some patients have homocystinuria — a genetic condition causing very large homocysteine accumulation.
See your doctor urgently. Aggressive B-vitamin treatment, MTHFR testing, and evaluation for homocystinuria are needed. Comprehensive cardiovascular risk assessment is warranted.
Homocysteine: {{value}} {{unit}} — very high (>15 mcmol/L)Upload your lab report and get your actual values interpreted in plain English — instantly, with no medical training required.