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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart + variants + surgery  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

 News results: Standard Version | Text Version | Image Version Results 1 - 4 of 4 for heart variants surgery. (0.04 seconds) 
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Presentations At AHA Expand On Clinical Utility Of DeCODE's DNA ...
Medical News Today (press release), UK - Nov 10, 2008
In the Sunday morning session, deCODE reviewed the latest findings on these 9p21 variants in MI and other cardiovascular conditions for which these SNPs are ...DCGN
Your Health Check - VENOUS DISEASE: Part III
Canton Daily Ledger, IL - Nov 17, 2008
Spider veins or ?rocket bursts? as they are sometimes called are a variant of varicose veins, but are most often present in the absence of traditional ...
(ie San Francisco hiking, San Francisco parenting)
Examiner.com - Nov 20, 2008
Although certain heart defects may require surgery. Special education and training, speech therapy, and physical therapy can help. ...
Large Study Identifies New Genetic Risk Factors for Brain Aneurysm
PR-CANADA.net (press release), Montenegro - Nov 11, 2008
?Each of these three variants has a fairly modest impact on risk,? Gunel says ? each copy increasing risk by 24 to 36 percent. ?But when you compare those ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: heart + gene + variants  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Gene May Put Women With Migraine At Increased Risk Of Heart ...
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 30, 2008
The women were also tested for a certain gene variant in the methyleneterahydrofolate reductase gene. During a 12-year follow-up period, 625 cardiovascular ...
Women?s Migraines Multiply Heart Risk WebMD
Gene Variant Increases Stroke Risk in Female Migraineurs MedPage Today
Gene Could Boost Stroke Risk for Migraine Sufferers Washington Post
all 34 news articles »
deCODE genetics Announces Second Quarter 2008 Financial Results
MarketWatch -
deCODE discovered sequence variants near the ASIP (agouti signaling protein) gene on chromosome 20 that greatly increase the likelihood of an individual ...DCGN

dBTechno
Statin study could lead to test for gene variant
The Associated Press - Jul 23, 2008
Using DNA samples, researchers found a gene variation in more than 60 percent of those with muscle weakness. The variant makes a protein less effective at ...
Statin snag Science News
Rare side effect of statins studied The Press Association
Discovery may boost statin safety BBC News
The Star-Ledger - NJ.com - Washington Post
all 228 news articles »  GENE
Cutting The Brakes On The Immune System; Newly Discovered Gene ...
Science Daily (press release) - Aug 2, 2008
In lupus patients with the gene variant, the immune system has trouble turning itself off, Gaffney said. "We suspect that the variant either doesn't make ...
Genetic testing brings new hopes, hard choices
Boston Globe, United States - Aug 3, 2008
As many as 1 million Americans may have one of the potentially dangerous gene variants. But "at the current price" - about $3000 - "I don't think anybody is ...

PRESS TV
Migraine linked to heart disease risk
PRESS TV, Iran - Aug 3, 2008
The study showed that having the gene variant in the absence of any history of migraine attacks is not linked to a higher risk of heart-related events. ...
Montreal Heart Institute researchers contribute to the discovery ...
Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada - Aug 1, 2008
Scientists believe that lupus is caused by genetic variants that interact with each other and the environment. About the Montreal Heart Institute: ...
FDA urges genetic test before giving AIDS drug
Westside Gazette -
Just 5 percent of people have the genetic variant that puts them at risk for hyper-sensitive reactions to Abacavir. The association between the two was ...

MedPage Today
Gene Variant Increases Risk of Myopathy with High-Dose Statins
MedPage Today, NJ - Jul 23, 2008
Explain to interested patients that the study found a particular gene variant was strongly associated with myopathy in patients taking high doses of a ...
Thought of heart disease weighs on young woman?s mind
Chattanooga Times Free Press, TN - Aug 3, 2008
It has a number of variants. Ichthyosis vulgaris starts between the third and 12th month of life. The scales look like they are pasted to the skin. ...
Source: Google News

Association of angiotensinogen gene T235 variant with increased risk of coronary heart disease. -
T Katsuya, G Koike, TW Yee, N Sharpe, R Jackson, R … - Lancet, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Association of angiotensinogen gene T235 variant with increased risk of
coronary heart disease. Katsuya T, Koike G, Yee TW, Sharpe ...

APOA 5 gene variants, lipoprotein particle distribution, and progression of coronary heart disease: … -
PJ Talmud, S Martin, MR Taskinen, MH Frick, MS … - The Journal of Lipid Research, 2004 - ASBMB
Page 1. APOA5 GENE VARIANTS, LIPOPROTEIN PARTICLE DISTRIBUTION AND PROGRESSION
OF CORONARY HEART DISEASE: RESULTS FROM THE LOCAT STUDY. ...

5, 10-Methylenetetrahydrofolate Reductase Gene Variants and Congenital Anomalies: A HuGE Review. -
LD Botto, Q Yang - American Journal of Epidemiology, 2000 - pt.wkhealth.com
... coronary heart disease: evidence for a common gene mutation. Circulation
1996;94:2154-8. ... 30. Molloy AM, Daly S, Mills JL, et al. Thermolabile variant of 5, ...

Interplay between promoter and structural gene variants control basal serum level of mannan-binding … -
HO Madsen - The Journal of Immunology, 1995 - Am Assoc Immnol
... Artery Disease in American Indians: The Strong Heart Study Circulation ... at codon 54
of the MBL2 gene are not ... and JYT Cheng Molecular Defects in Variant Forms of ...

Lack of Association of 3 Functional Gene Variants With Hypertension in African Americans -
N Larson, R Hutchinson, E Boerwinkle - Hypertension, 2000 - Am Heart Assoc
... Heart J., February 2, 2002; 23(4): 271 - 273 ... Effects of the G protein {beta}3-subunit
gene C825T polymorphism ... Focus on "A splice variant of the G protein {beta}3 ...

… AIV Gene Variant S347 Is Associated With Increased Risk of Coronary Heart Disease and Lower Plasma … -
WR Wong, E Hawe, LK Li, GJ Miller, V Nicaud, LA … - Circulation Research, 2003 - Am Heart Assoc
... and M. Syvanne APOA5 gene variants, lipoprotein particle distribution, and progression
of coronary heart disease: results from the LOCAT study J. Lipid Res ...

… -Converting Enzyme Gene Locus Associates With Coronary Artery Disease in the Caerphilly Heart Study -
RK Mattu, EWA Needham, DJ Galton, E Frangos, AJL … - Circulation, 1995 - Am Heart Assoc
... Articles. A DNA Variant at the Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Gene Locus Associates
With Coronary Artery Disease in the Caerphilly Heart Study. ...

Inflammatory gene polymorphisms and ischaemic heart disease: review of population association … -
F Andreotti, I Porto, F Crea, A Maseri - British Medical Journal, 2002 - heart.bmj.com
... and EH CORDER Acute Myocardial Infarction and Proinflammatory Gene Variants Ann ...
Monocyte-specific Bcl-2 expression attenuates inflammation and heart failure in ...

Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor a Gene Variants Influence Progression of Coronary … -
DM Flavell, Y Jamshidi, E Hawe, I Pineda Torra, MR … - Circulation, 2002 - Am Heart Assoc
... and M. Syvanne APOA5 gene variants, lipoprotein particle distribution, and progression
of coronary heart disease: results from the LOCAT study J. Lipid Res ...

[CITATION] Diuretic Therapy, the {alpha}-Adducin Gene Variant, and the Risk of Myocardial Infarction or Stroke … -
BM Psaty, NL Smith, SR Heckbert, HL Vos, RN … - JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 2002 - JAMA
... such as angina, hypertension, diabetes, congestive heart failure, stroke ... from the
sequence of the gene, and they ... in the presence of the variant Trp460 allele. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Gene variants predict heart muscle damage after cardiac surgery

Researchers at Duke University Medical Center have found that patients with six specific variants of genes involved in the body's immune response are significantly more likely to suffer damage of heart tissue after cardiac surgery.

These findings are important because current analytical methods cannot reliably predict who will be likely to suffer from myocardial infarction, or heart tissue death after cardiac surgery.

It is estimated that between 7 and 15 percent of patients undergoing coronary bypass surgery will suffer from a subsequent myocardial infarction, the researchers said.

" We have identified six gene variants, or polymorphisms, that are significantly associated with the incidence of post-operative myocardial infarction following cardiac surgery," said Duke cardiothoracic anesthesiolologist Mihai Podgoreanu, who presented the results of the Duke study during the Annual Scientific Session of the American Heart Association ( AHA ).

 
The analysis was supported by the National Institutes of Health and the AHA. " Collectively, these variants can explain about 75 percent of the variability in heart damage in patients undergoing surgery."

" These findings should help physicians identify those patients who are at highest risk before surgery, so they can better inform patients and take appropriate precautions during and after surgery," Podgoreanu continued. "Additionally, these findings validate that specific proteins are involved in the damage to heart tissue, which gives us rational targets for potential new drugs."

Of the six polymorphisms, four are directly associated with the damage, while the other two polymorphisms are found in genes that would normally have a protective effect.
 
During a bypass procedure, the heart is typically stopped for a period of time to allow a stable field of operation for the surgeons, and its function replaced by the heart-lung machine.
During this time, the heart is bathed in a cold slushy solution to reduce the heart's metabolic needs.

" However, despite all our best efforts to protect the heart during surgery, there is always some damage as the heart re-warms and the blood flow returns to the muscle," Podgoreanu said. This damage is known as reperfusion injury.

Physicians can determine the extent of damage to heart muscle by measuring the levels of a specific enzyme known as creatine kinase-MB ( CK-MB ), which leaks into the bloodstream as heart muscle cell walls break apart as a result of damage or death.
 
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The researchers began by identifying 48 known polymorphisms of 23 candidate genes that are all involved with the body's immune response. They then enrolled 432 patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Blood samples were taken 24 hours after surgery. Patients were considered to have suffered a post-operative myocardial infarction if their CK-MB levels were at least ten times higher than the upper limit of normal. Of the patients, 52, or 12 percent, were considered to have suffered an myocardial infarction.

Using a two-step genetic analysis, the researchers looked for genetic difference between those patients who suffered a post-operative myocardial infarction and those who did not.

" We found it interesting that each of the six polymorphisms individually had only a modest effect, but when taken together, the combined effect was significant," Podgoreanu said. " If an individual is unfortunate enough to have this combination of genetic factors, they will likely experience an exaggerated and negative response to reperfusion."

Specifically, the deleterious polymorphisms were in genes that code for the production of four different proteins: interleukin-6 ( IL-6 ), C-reactive protein ( CRP ), intercellular adhesion molecule-1 ( ICAM1 ) and lipopolysaccharide-binding protein ( LBP ).

IL-6 is a protein that regulates the intensity of the immune response, and CRP is a protein released into the bloodstream as a natural reaction to infection, fever or other injury. ICAM-1 allows the white cells to attach to the inner lining of the blood vessels where they inflict damage.
LBP regulates the body's response to bacteria normally living in the gastrointestinal tract that can release endotoxins into the bloodstream as a result of the action of the heart-lung machine.

The final polymorphism – in a gene that codes for the enzyme catalase – appears to be involved in mediating the effects of oxidative stress. The normal version of the gene produces proteins that can blunt the negative effects of oxygen free radicals, while the polymorphism is unable to do so effectively. It is well established that heart muscle cells are placed under oxidative stress during reperfusion.

Earlier this year, members of the same research team found that patients with a different set of polymorphisms were at a two to four times more likely to suffer kidney damage as a result of major heart surgery.
In another study this year, the team found variants of genes that control clotting and the contractility of blood vessels can double the ability to predict those heart surgery patients at greatest risk of bleeding after surgery.

Source: Duke University Medical Center, 2005

 

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