| Literature DB >> 18823627 |
Maria C Izar1, Tatiana Helfenstein, Silvia S Ihara, Waldir G Relvas, Andreza O Santos, Simone C Fischer, Leonor E Pinto, Ieda E Lopes, Daniel R Pomaro, Marilia I Fonseca, Luis C Bodanese, Emilio H Moriguchi, Jose F Saraiva, Luiz Introcaso, Agnaldo D Souza, Marileia Scartezini, Kerginaldo P Torres, Leao Zagury, Paulo C Jardim, Eduardo A Costa, Lucia H Tacito, Adriana Forti, Maria E Magalhaes, Antonio R Chacra, Marcelo C Bertolami, Andreia A Loures-Vale, Marco A Barros, Hermes T Xavier, Ruy Lyra, Dikran Argamanijan, Armenio Guimaraes, Jose P Novazzi, Nelson Kasinski, Abrahao Afiune, Tania L Martinez, Raul D Santos, Jose C Nicolau, Luiz A Cesar, Rui M Povoa, Antonio C Carvalho, Sang W Han, Francisco A Fonseca.
Abstract
The association of polymorphisms affecting lipid metabolism with the risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in type 2 diabetes mellitus was investigated. The Genetics, Outcomes and Lipids in type 2 Diabetes (GOLD) Study is a prospective, multicenter study, conducted on 990 patients presenting diabetes and MI (n=386), or diabetes without previous manifestation of stroke, peripheral or coronary arterial disease (n=604), recruited from 27 institutions in Brazil. APO A1 (A/G -75 and C/T +83) and APO C3 (C/G 3'UTR) non-coding sequences, CETP (Taq 1B), LPL (D9N), APO E (epsilon2, epsilon3, epsilon4,), PON-1 (Q192R), and two LCAT variants Arg(147)-->Trp and Tyr(171)-->Stop were tested by PCR-RFLP. There was a higher prevalence of LPL DN genotype (19% vs.12%, p=0.03) and a higher frequency of the N allele (11% vs. 7%) among subjects with MI when compared to controls, with an odds ratio of MI for carriers of 9N allele of 2.46 (95% CI=1.79-3.39, p<0.0001). This association was present in men and women, in non-smokers and in hypertensive patients. A logistic regression model including gender, duration of diabetes, systolic blood pressure, HDL-C, left ventricle hypertrophy and D9N polymorphism showed that the latter still remained significantly associated with MI (OR=1.50, 95% CI=1.02-2.25, p=0.049). These findings suggest that D9N polymorphism can be a useful risk marker for myocardial infarction and that further potential candidate genes should be screened for exploratory analysis and for future therapeutic intervention in diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18823627 DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2008.08.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Atherosclerosis ISSN: 0021-9150 Impact factor: 5.162