SHORTER HEIGHT IS DIRECTLY ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED RISK OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE
The shorter you are- the more your risk of coronary heart disease.
That's the key finding
of a new study led by the University of Leicester which discovered that every
2.5 inches change in your height affected your risk of coronary heart disease
by 13.5%. For example, compared to a 5ft 6inch tall person, a 5 foot tall person
on average has a 32% higher risk of coronary heart disease because of their
relatively shorter stature.
The research, led by
Professor Sir Nilesh Samani, British Heart Foundation Professor of Cardiology
at the University of Leicester, is published online in the New England Journal
of Medicine. The research was supported by the British Heart Foundation, The National
Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and others.
Professor Samani said:
"For more than 60 years it has been known that there is an inverse
relationship between height and risk of coronary heart disease.
"It is not clear
whether this relationship is due to confounding factors such as poor
socioeconomic environment, or nutrition, during childhood that on the one hand
determine achieved height and on the other the risk of coronary heart disease,
or whether it represents a primary relationship between shorter height and more
coronary heart disease.
"Now, using a
genetic approach, researchers at the University of Leicester undertaking the
study on behalf of an international consortium of scientists (the CADIoGRAM+C4D
consortium) have shown that the association between shorter height and higher
risk of coronary heart disease is a primary relationship and is not due to
confounding factors."
Coronary heart disease
is the commonest cause of premature death worldwide. It is the condition where
the arteries that supply blood to the heart muscle (coronary arteries) become
narrowed due to a deposition of fatty material (plaque) in the walls of the
arteries. If a blood clot forms over the plaque then the artery can become
completely blocked suddenly giving rise to a heart attack.
Professor Samani, who
is also Head of the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences at the University of
Leicester and a Consultant Cardiologist at Leicester's Hospitals, added:
"Height has a strong genetic determination and in the last few years a
large number of genetic variants have been identified in our DNA that
determines one's height.
"The beauty about
DNA is that it cannot be modified by one's lifestyle or socio-economic
conditions. Therefore if shorter height is directly connected with increased
risk of coronary heart disease one would expect that these variants would also
be associated with coronary heart disease and this is precisely what we
found."
Dr Christopher Nelson,
British Heart Foundation-funded lecturer who undertook the analysis said:
"We had genetic data through the CARDIoGRAM+C4D consortium on almost
200,000 persons with or without coronary heart disease. We examined whether 180
genetic variants that affect height also associated with coronary heart
disease. In aggregate, we found that for every change in height of 6.5 cm
(approx. 2.5 inches) caused by these variants the risk of coronary heart
disease changed on average by 13.5%.
"The more height
increasing genetic variants that you carry the lower your risk of coronary
heart disease and conversely if you were genetically shorter the higher your
risk."
Dr Nelson added:
"We also examined whether the association we found between shorter height
and higher risk of coronary heart disease could be explained by an effect of
height on known risk factors for coronary heart disease like cholesterol, high
blood pressure, diabetes etc. We only observed an association with cholesterol
and fat levels which could explain a small proportion (less than a third) of
the relationship between shorter height and coronary heart disease. The rest is
probably explained by shared biological processes that determine achieved
height and the development of coronary heart disease at the same time."
Professor Jeremy
Pearson, Associate Medical Director at the BHF, which part-funded the study,
said: "By using the power of very large scale genetic studies, this
research is the first to show that the known association between increased
height and a lower risk of coronary heart disease is at least in part due to
genetics, rather than purely down to nutrition or lifestyle factors. The team
has identified several ways that naturally occurring gene variations can
control both a person's height and their risk of coronary heart disease.
Further exploration of these genes may suggest new ways to reduce the risk of
heart and circulatory disease."
Professor Samani
concluded: "While we know about many lifestyle factors such as smoking
that affect risk of coronary heart disease, our findings underscore the fact
that the causes of this common disease are very complex and other things that
we understand much more poorly have a significant impact.
"While our
findings do not have any immediate clinical implications, better and fuller
understanding of the biological mechanisms that underlie the relationship
between shorter height and higher risk of coronary heart disease may open up
new ways for its prevention and treatment."
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