Wednesday, 8 April 2015

Shorter people have bigger risk of heart disease






Heart diagram. Credit: Wikipedia

Short people face a greater lifetime risk of clogged arteries, according to a study out Wednesday that confirmed the long-known link between height and heart disease by examining genetics.



The study is the first to show that the higher risk is primarily due to a variety of genes that influence whether a person is tall or short, and not potentially confounding factors like poverty or poor nutrition.


The study led by researchers at the University of Leicester is published in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Researchers examined 180 different genetics variants in a database of nearly 200,000 people with and without , which is caused by a buildup of plaque in the arteries and can lead to heart attack. It is the most common cause of early death worldwide.


They found that every 2.5 inches (6.3 centimeters) in a person's affected their risk of coronary heart disease by 13.5 percent.


As an example, a five-foot (1.5 meter) tall person would have on average a 32 percent higher risk of developing coronary heart disease than a person who was five-foot-six (1.68 meters), said the study.


"The more height increasing genetic variants that you carry the lower your risk of coronary heart disease," said co-author Christopher Nelson, a British Heart Foundation-funded lecturer at the University of Leicester.


"And conversely if you were genetically shorter the higher your risk."


Researchers hope that further study of the genes implicated in height and heart disease may lead to better prevention and treatment in the future.


"For more than 60 years it has been known that there is an inverse relationship between height and risk of coronary heart disease," said lead author Sir Nilesh Samani, professor of cardiology at the University of Leicester.


"Now, using a genetic approach," he said, researchers have shown that the "association between shorter height and higher risk of coronary is a primary relationship and is not due to confounding factors."



© 2015 AFP


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Heart diagram. Credit: Wikipedia


Short people face a greater lifetime risk of clogged arteries, according to a study out Wednesday that confirmed the long-known link between height and heart disease by examining genetics.



The study is the first to show that the higher risk is primarily due to a variety of genes that influence whether a person is tall or short, and not potentially confounding factors like poverty or poor nutrition.


The study led by researchers at the University of Leicester is published in the New England Journal of Medicine.


Researchers examined 180 different genetics variants in a database of nearly 200,000 people with and without , which is caused by a buildup of plaque in the arteries and can lead to heart attack. It is the most common cause of early death worldwide.


They found that every 2.5 inches (6.3 centimeters) in a person's affected their risk of coronary heart disease by 13.5 percent.


As an example, a five-foot (1.5 meter) tall person would have on average a 32 percent higher risk of developing coronary heart disease than a person who was five-foot-six (1.68 meters), said the study.


"The more height increasing genetic variants that you carry the lower your risk of coronary heart disease," said co-author Christopher Nelson, a British Heart Foundation-funded lecturer at the University of Leicester.


"And conversely if you were genetically shorter the higher your risk."


Researchers hope that further study of the genes implicated in height and heart disease may lead to better prevention and treatment in the future.


"For more than 60 years it has been known that there is an inverse relationship between height and risk of coronary heart disease," said lead author Sir Nilesh Samani, professor of cardiology at the University of Leicester.


"Now, using a genetic approach," he said, researchers have shown that the "association between shorter height and higher risk of coronary is a primary relationship and is not due to confounding factors."



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date Apr 15, 2014

With growing evidence that a measurement of the buildup of calcium in coronary arteries can predict heart disease risk, Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute (LA BioMed) researchers found that the process of "calcium ...



Increased risk of heart attack and death with progressive coronary artery calcium buildup


date May 02, 2013

Patients with increasing accumulations of coronary artery calcium were more than six times more likely to suffer from a heart attack or die from heart disease than patients who didn't have increasing accumulations, according ...



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date Apr 02, 2015

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