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Submitted on December 14, 2001
Accepted on March 26, 2002
From Department of Medicine (J.N.B., M.J.R., R.B.D.), Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY; the Department of Genetics (J.W.M., L.A., K.E.N.), Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, San Antonio, Tex; Aberdeen Area Tribal Chairmen's Health Board (T.K.W.), Rapid City, SD; University of Oklahoma School of Public Health Services (E.T.L.), Oklahoma City; the Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications (R.R.F.), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md; and Medstar Research Institute (B.V.H.), Washington, DC.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rbdevere{at}med.cornell.edu.
AbstractAortic
root dilatation is a major pathophysiological
mechanism for aortic regurgitation and predisposes the
aortic root to dissection or rupture. However, only a small proportion
of the variance of aortic root size can be explained by its known
clinical and demographic correlates. The present study was
undertaken to determine the heritability of
echocardiographically derived aortic root diameter in
the American Indian participants in the second Strong Heart Study
examination. Echocardiograms were analyzed in 1373 SHS
participants who had
1 family member in the cohort. Heritability
calculations were performed by using variance component
analysis as implemented in SOLAR, a computer analysis
program. In a polygenic model, the variables entered and identified
as covariates of larger aortic root diameter were older age, male sex,
and center (P<0.001), which
accounted for 35% of the overall variability of aortic root diameter.
After simultaneous adjustment was made for these
significant covariates, the proportion of phenotypic variance due to
additive genetic contribution or residual heritability
(h2)
was 0.51 (SE=0.08, P<0.001).
Additionally, simultaneous adjustment for height, weight,
and systolic and diastolic BPs yielded slightly
lower residual
h2
of aortic root diameter
(h2=0.44,
SE=0.08, P<0.001), which
accounted for 26% of the overall variance of aortic root size. Because
center effects were identified as significant covariates in the
analyses,
h2
analyses were performed separately in Arizona, Oklahoma, and
North/South Dakota centers, which confirmed that a significant
proportion of the phenotypic variance of aortic root diameter is due to
additive genetic contribution. Heredity explains a substantial
proportion of the variability of aortic root size that is not accounted
for by age, sex, body size, and blood pressure.
Echocardiographic screening of family members with
aortic root dilatation may identify other individuals predisposed to
aortic dissection or
rupture.
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