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Familial correlations, cohabitation effects, and heritability for cardiovascular risk factors

Familial correlations in cardiovascular risk factors were investigated with use of data from a community-based sample of 1319 nuclear families involving 4178 adult persons collected in the Busselton Population Health Surveys over the period 1966 to 1981. The risk factors considered were systolic blo...

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Published in:Annals of epidemiology 1996-05, Vol.6 (3), p.188-194
Main Authors: Knuiman, Matthew W., Divitini, Mark L., Welborn, Timothy A., Bartholomew, Helen C.
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Language:English
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description Familial correlations in cardiovascular risk factors were investigated with use of data from a community-based sample of 1319 nuclear families involving 4178 adult persons collected in the Busselton Population Health Surveys over the period 1966 to 1981. The risk factors considered were systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, body mass index, triceps fatfold, and cholesterol. All risk factors showed positive familial correlations, with correlations generally being lower for spouses than for parent-offspring pairs or for siblings. Spouse correlations showed little variation with age, suggesting that observed correlations are primarily due to assortative mating and not to cohabitation. The parent-offspring correlations tended to decline with age of (adult) offspring; this observation suggests that the effect of a shared household environment during childhood and adolescence diminishes over time when living apart during adulthood. The sibling correlations decreased with age for blood pressure and serum cholesterol and increased with age for body mass index and triceps fatfold. The estimated heritabilities were 27% for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 37% for serum cholesterol, 52% for body mass index, and 23% for triceps fatfold. These results confirm that substantial familial aggregation of cardiovascular risk factors occurs and that much of this aggregation has a genetic basis, although assortative mating (in spouses) and environmental influences (in offspring and siblings) are also present. The nuclear family should be considered as a point of intervention in cardiovascular disease prevention programs.
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The estimated heritabilities were 27% for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, 37% for serum cholesterol, 52% for body mass index, and 23% for triceps fatfold. These results confirm that substantial familial aggregation of cardiovascular risk factors occurs and that much of this aggregation has a genetic basis, although assortative mating (in spouses) and environmental influences (in offspring and siblings) are also present. 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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects Adult
Age Distribution
Blood Pressure - genetics
Body Constitution - genetics
Body Mass Index
Cardiovascular disease
Cardiovascular Diseases - epidemiology
Cardiovascular Diseases - genetics
Cholesterol - blood
Cholesterol - genetics
cohabitation
Cohort Studies
cohort study
Confidence Intervals
familial correlation
Family Characteristics
Family Health
Female
Genetic Variation
Health Surveys
heritability
Humans
Likelihood Functions
Male
Middle Aged
Nuclear Family
Parents
Risk Factors
Sex Distribution
Spouses
Time Factors
Western Australia - epidemiology
title Familial correlations, cohabitation effects, and heritability for cardiovascular risk factors
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