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Journal ArticleDOI

Familial factors in premature coronary heart disease—a preliminary report from the tecumseh community health study

01 Mar 1970-American Journal of Epidemiology (Oxford University Press)-Vol. 91, Iss: 3, pp 233-237
About: This article is published in American Journal of Epidemiology.The article was published on 1970-03-01. It has received 84 citations till now.
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TL;DR: The findings suggest that at younger ages, death from coronary heart disease is influenced by genetic factors in both women and men, and implies that the genetic effect decreases at older ages.
Abstract: Background A family history of premature coronary heart disease has long been thought to be a risk factor for coronary heart disease. Using data from 26 years of follow-up of 21,004 Swedish twins born between 1886 and 1925, we investigated this issue further by assessing the risk of death from coronary heart disease in pairs of monozygotic and dizygotic twins. Methods The study population consisted of 3298 monozygotic and 5964 dizygotic male twins and 4012 monozygotic and 7730 dizygotic female twins. The age at which one twin died of coronary heart disease was used as the primary independent variable to predict the risk of death from coronary heart disease in the other twin. Information about other risk factors was obtained from questionnaires administered in 1961 and 1963. Actuarial life-table analysis was used to estimate the cumulative probability of death from coronary heart disease. Relative-hazard estimates were obtained from a multivariate survival analysis. Results Among the men, the relative haza...

1,275 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Paternal but not maternal history of MI was related to increased risk of coronary artery surgery and associations were not appreciably altered by controlling for diet or established risk factors, either individually or in multivariate models.
Abstract: The relation between parental history of myocardial infarction (MI) and risk of coronary artery disease (CAD) was prospectively examined among 45,317 U.S. male health professionals who were free of diagnosed CAD, 40 to 75 years of age in 1986 and followed for 2 years. These men provided details of parental history of MI, including their parents' age at the first event, their personal history of hypertension, hypercholesterolemia and diabetes mellitus, and a detailed dietary assessment completed at baseline. During 72,454 person-years of follow-up, 181 non-fatal MIs were documented, 49 men died from MI or sudden death, and 140 underwent coronary artery surgery or angioplasty. Compared with men without any history of parental MI, those whose mothers or fathers had had an MI at less than 70 years of age had a substantially elevated risk of MI (relative risk = 2.2, 95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 3.8 for maternal history; relative risk = 1.7, 95% confidence interval 1.2 to 2.3 for paternal history). Risk of MI increased with decreasing age at parental MI. Paternal but not maternal history of MI was related to increased risk of coronary artery surgery. These associations were not appreciably altered by controlling for diet or established risk factors, either individually or in multivariate models. These prospective data indicate that a history of MI in either parent is associated with an increased risk of CAD among men.

192 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that the risk of premature coronary heart disease in the persons at highest risk could be largely eliminated if information about family history were used to identify such persons at an early stage and if they were treated properly for their correctable risk factors.
Abstract: The occurrence of coronary heart disease and its main risk factors were assessed among the first degree relatives of 309 men from South and East Finland, including 203 men with fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction and 106 healthy reference men under age 56 years. The younger the patient at the diagnosis of a first myocardial infarction, the more common was coronary heart disease in his parents and siblings. The risk of having coronary heart disease by age 55 was, respectively, 11.4, 8.3 and 1.3 times greater in the South and 6.7, 3.6 and 1.8 times greater in the East for the brothers of patients than for the brothers of reference subjects depending on whether the diagnosis of myocardial infarction in the patient had first been established before the age of 46 years at age 46 to 50 years or at age 51 to 55 years. Hypertension and hyperlipidemia, but none of the other risk factors studied, were most common among the relatives of the youngest patients and diminished in frequency with advancing age of the patient. Most of the strong familial component in coronary heart disease of early onset thus appears to be mediated by familial hyperlipidemias and hypertension. It is suggested that the risk of premature coronary heart disease in the persons at highest risk could be largely eliminated if information about family history were used to identify such persons at an early stage and if they were treated properly for their correctable risk factors.

190 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For persons with CAD at age 60 years or older, maternal CAD death was a stronger predictor of CAD than paternal CAD death, and those with either a mother or a father with CAD, if CAD onset in the offspring occurred before the age of 60 years.
Abstract: Data from the Framingham Study, a population-based prospective study of 5,209 persons, were analyzed to determine whether a parental history of death by coronary artery disease (CAD) before or after 65 years of age was an independent risk factor for CAD of early onset (age younger than 60 years) or late onset (age 60 years or older) among the men and women in the cohort. Death due to CAD in parents was associated with a 30% increase in the risk of CAD. The effect was apparently stronger for an early CAD outcome, with adjusted relative risks of 1.5 for early and 1.2 for late outcome CAD. The effect of parental CAD death on risk was not mediated by other shared risk factors for CAD. These findings were similar for those with either a mother or a father with CAD, if CAD onset in the offspring occurred before the age of 60 years. For persons with CAD at age 60 years or older, maternal CAD death was a stronger predictor of CAD than paternal CAD death. The association with parental history of CAD was similar among men and women in the cohort, with adjusted relative risks of 1.3 and 1.2, respectively. However, early age of parental CAD death may account for the association among women (RR = 1.6), whereas late age of CAD death for either parent was associated with the risk of CAD among men (RR = 1.4).

186 citations