Heritability of Coronary Artery Calcium Quantity Measured by Electron Beam Computed Tomography in Asymptomatic Adults
Autor: | Julia S. Chu, Darrell L. Ellsworth, Patrick F. Sheedy, Eric Boerwinkle, Stephen T. Turner, Patricia A. Peyser, Lawrence F. Bielak |
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Rok vydání: | 2002 |
Předmět: |
Male
Pathology medicine.medical_specialty Electron Beam Computed Tomography Coronary Artery Disease Coronary Angiography Asymptomatic Coronary artery disease Risk Factors Physiology (medical) Internal medicine Humans Medicine Genetic Predisposition to Disease Risk factor Subclinical infection business.industry Calcinosis Middle Aged Stepwise regression Heritability medicine.disease Coronary Vessels Cardiology Calcium Female medicine.symptom Cardiomyopathies Tomography X-Ray Computed Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Calcification |
Zdroj: | Circulation. 106:304-308 |
ISSN: | 1524-4539 0009-7322 |
DOI: | 10.1161/01.cir.0000022664.21832.5d |
Popis: | Background — Electron beam computed tomography is an accurate, noninvasive method to detect and quantify coronary artery calcification (CAC), a marker of subclinical and clinical coronary artery atherosclerosis. CAC quantity predicts future coronary artery disease end points in asymptomatic adults, but measured risk factors explain less than half the variability in CAC quantity. Although several candidate genes for CAC have been identified, the relative importance of genetic influences on CAC quantity has not been assessed in asymptomatic adults in a community. Methods and Results — We quantified the relative contributions of measured risk factors and genetic influences on CAC quantity measured by electron beam computed tomography in 698 asymptomatic white adults from 302 families. Before adjusting for any risk factors, 43.5% of the variation in CAC quantity was attributable to genetic factors ( P =0.0007). Independent predictors of CAC quantity were identified with stepwise linear regression. After adjusting for these risk factors, including age, sex, fasting glucose level, systolic blood pressure, pack-years of smoking, and LDL cholesterol, 41.8% of the residual variation in CAC quantity was attributable to genetic factors ( P =0.0003). Conclusions — These results demonstrate the importance of genetic factors in subclinical coronary atherosclerosis variation as measured by CAC quantity. The presence of genetic effects suggests that unknown genes that influence CAC quantity are yet to be identified. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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