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Genetic contribution to the variance in left ventricular mass: the Tecumseh Offspring Study. J Hypertens 2001 Jul;19(7):1217-22

Date

07/12/2001

Pubmed ID

11446711

DOI

10.1097/00004872-200107000-00006

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0034954768 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   17 Citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To estimate the contribution of heredity to the variance in left ventricular mass (LVM), and to ascertain whether genetic factors may interact with non-genetic factors in promoting LVM growth.

SUBJECTS AND SETTING: The study population consisted of 290 healthy parents and 251 healthy children living in Tecumseh, Michigan, USA.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Correlation of parents' LVM with offspring's LVM adjusting for a number of clinical variables.

METHODS: LVM in parents and offspring was measured with M-mode echocardiography by the same investigators.

RESULTS: Parents unadjusted LVM was unrelated to offspring unadjusted LVM, but after removing the confounding effect of age, sex, anthropometric measurements, systolic blood pressure, plasma insulin and urinary sodium excretion, parent-child correlation for LVM was 0.28 (P = 0.006). The relative contribution of parental-adjusted LVM and of several offspring phenotypic and environmental variables on offspring LVM was evaluated by multivariable regression analysis. When age, gender, anthropometric measurements and systolic blood pressure were accounted for, adjusted LVM of parents explained only 1.6% of the total variance in offspring LVM. However, after inclusion of insulin and urinary sodium in the model heredity explained 7.6% of the total variance in offspring LVM, and its predictive power was second only to that of child's height. Furthermore, an interactive effect of parental LVM with offspring systolic blood pressure was found on child's left ventricular mass.

CONCLUSION: Heredity can explain a small, but definite proportion of the variance in LVM. Higher blood pressure favors the phenotypic expression of the genes that regulate LVM growth.

Author List

Palatini P, Krause L, Amerena J, Nesbitt S, Majahalme S, Tikhonoff V, Valentini M, Julius S

Author

Silja Majahalme MD, PhD Associate Professor in the Medicine department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adolescent
Adult
Blood Pressure
Child
Echocardiography
Female
Genetic Variation
Heart Ventricles
Humans
Male