Evidence that men with familial hypercholesterolemia can avoid early coronary death. An analysis of 77 gene carriers in four Utah pedigrees
- 10 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 255 (2) , 219-224
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.255.2.219
Abstract
To study the genetic influence on serum cholesterol levels and early coronary heart disease, 1,134 individuals were screened from 18 Utah pedigrees. In most pedigrees, serum cholesterol appeared to be a purely polygenic trait, with 54% heritability. In four pedigrees with dominant familial hypercholesterolemia, male heterozygotes had a mean serum cholesterol level of 352 mg/dL, myocardial infarction at an average age of 42 years, and coronary death at an average age of 45 years. An informative pedigree structure allowed the identification of four ancestral males born before 1880 who carried this lethal gene and survived to ages 62, 68, 72, and 81 years. This suggests that some healthy life-style factors protected these men against the expression of a gene that had led to coronary disease by age 45 years in all their heterozygous great-grandsons. One heterozygote showed a drop in serum cholesterol level from 426 to 248 mg/dL, with strict adherence to a low-fat diet without drugs. These observations should help encourage physicians to try harder to identify and help such individuals.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Lipid Research Clinics Coronary Primary Prevention Trial ResultsJAMA, 1984
- SODIUM-LITHIUM COUNTERTRANSPORT IN ERYTHROCYTES OF HYPERTENSION PRONE FAMILIES IN UTAHAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 1983
- A mixed-model likelihood approximation on large pedigreesComputers and Biomedical Research, 1982
- Analysis of family resemblance for lipids and lipoproteinsClinical Genetics, 1979
- Automated enzymic measurement of total cholesterol in serum.Clinical Chemistry, 1978
- Skewness in Commingled DistributionsBiometrics, 1976