Essential hypertension (HTA) is the clinical expression of a disordered interaction between the genetic, physiological, and biochemical systems that under usual conditions maintain cardiovascular homeostasis. We studied the effects of the angiotensinogen M235T, angiotensin converting enzyme insertion/deletion (ACE I/D), and angiotensin II receptor 1 (AT1R) A1166C gene polymorphisms on the risk of HTA and to evaluate the relationship between these polymorphisms and obesity. We performed AGT, ACE and AGTR genotyping in 142 hypertensive patients and 191 control subjects using PCR-RFLP methods and PCR, respectively. The three polymorphisms were significantly associated with HTA. Individuals carrying the mutated TT of AGT, DD of ACE and CC of AT1R genotypes had an 1.67 (P = 0.032), 3.09 (P < 0.001) and 3.45 (P < 0.001)-fold increased risk of HTA. After adjustment for sex, smoking, diabetes, dyslipidemia, BMI, triglycerides and DD, TT and CC genotypes, BMI was independent risk factor of HTA (OR = 3.14; P < 0.001). An association of BMI with ACE gene polymorphism (P = 0.035), whereas no association with AGT and AT1R gene polymorphisms was obtained. The proportion of hypertensives is as high as 21.8 and 13.4% in the overweight and the obese DD group. The present study implies that the genotyping for the variants of RAS gene could in the future become an important part of the clinical process of risk identification for HTA.
ACE DD genotype associated with higher serum ACE activity is increased in the studied population and might be clinically useful as markers to assess risk for AMI.
A multiparametric echocardiographic strategy based on the association of conventional criteria is a better indicator of CRT response than the existing single parametric approaches.
Hereditary (ATTRv) and wild-type (ATTRwt) transthyretin amyloidosis are severe and fatal systemic diseases, characterised by amyloid fibrillar accumulation principally in the heart or peripheral nerves (or both). Since 2012, tafamidis has been used in France to treat patients with ATTRv with neuropathy (alone or combined with cardiomyopathy). Recently, the Phase III ATTRACT trial showed that tafamidis decreased the relative risk of mortality in ATTR amyloidosis with cardiomyopathy. The aims of this study were to assess the clinical characteristics of ATTR amyloidosis in a real-life population in comparison to the population included in the ATTRACT trial and to assess the impact of tafamidis treatment on major cardiovascular outcome (MCO)-free survival time without cardiac decompensation, heart transplant, or death.
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