Background: Sirtuins (SIRT) have recently been identified as the pivotal regulators of lifespan and health. SIRT1 has protective effects against cardiovascular disease (CVD) and through its deacetylase activity it regulates numerous essential pathways including regulating blood pressure, reducing atherosclerosis, heart protection against oxidative stress and inducing cardiac cell survival and growth.Aims: Therefore, this study was conducted to evaluate whether two genetic polymorphisms of SIRT1 rs3758391 T/C and rs369274325 G/T are associated with the risk of CVD.Material and methods: A total of 500 Iranian subjects including 250 CVD patients and 250 healthy individuals as the control group were recruited in this case-control study. Genotyping of SIRT1 rs3758391 T/C and rs369274325 G/T polymorphisms were performed using PCR-RFLP and Tetra-ARMS PCR methods, respectively.Results: Our findings indicated a significant difference between two groups regarding the SIRT1 rs3758391 CC genotype in both additive and recessive models. The rs3758391 CC genotype was found to be more frequent in CVD patients than in the controls (19% vs. 6%), suggesting a statistically significant difference in either of additive (CC vs. TT; OR = 3.06, P = 0.001) as well as recessive models (CC vs. TT + CT genotype; OR = 3.72, P = 0.001).Conclusion: Our study for the first time suggests that the SIRT1 rs3758391 T/C polymorphism may confer an increased risk of CVD in both additive and recessive models, in this Iranian population.Ó 2014 Production and hosting by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of Ain Shams University.
Background:Myocardial infarction (MI) is a heart condition caused by the suspension of blood circulation in a part of the myocardium. There are different risk factors contributing to a heart attack. Some believe that endorphins and endogenous opioids play an important role in causing MIs.Objectives:This study intended to determine the relationship between opium dependency and mortality rate among patients with MI.Patients and Methods:This retrospective study investigated patients who had MI for the first time and were hospitalized in the coronary care unit (CCU) of Khatamolanbia hospital in Zahedan, Iran, from 2007 to 2010. These patients were either opium dependent or not. Four hundred patients were selected. The patients’ possibilities of death and re-hospitalization after the first MI were confirmed over the phone. Data was analyzed through t-test and chi-squared test.Results:Of all the patients, 19.5% were opium-dependent. The mortality rate in the non-opium-dependent group was 5.9%, while in the dependent group this rate was 11.5% (P = 0.072). The number of re-hospitalizations due to heart problems was higher in the opium-dependent patients (P < 0.001).Conclusions:There was no meaningful relationship between the mortality rate of patients with MI who were either opium-dependent or non-opium-dependent. The number of re-hospitalizations due to heart problems was meaningfully higher in the opium-dependent patients; hence, educating people and training them on the destructive effects of opium, specifically in patients with heart conditions is highly recommended.
Introduction: Congestive heart failure (CHF) is a serious condition and lack of medication adherence is one of the most common problems in the treatment of patients with CHF. This study aimed to determine the relationship between medication adherence and affective temperaments in patients with CHF. Material and methods: This cross-sectional study was performed on 150 patients, who were referred to the cardio
Acute myocardial infarction (AMI) is one of the most common cardiovascular complications with a complex pathogenesis where inflammatory markers are involved in disease etiology. The aim of this Khazaei H.A. et al. Хазеи Х.А. и др. Medical Immunology (Russia)/Meditsinskaya Immunologiya Медицинская Иммунология study was to investigate haptoglobin phenotypes and their association with some risk factors in patients with a history of AMI. 120 patients who were referred to the emergency department of Amir Al Momenin hospital of Zahedan city, Zahedan-Iran were recruited in a cross-sectional case control study. 120 normal individuals were also chosen as controls for this study. Serum was isolated from routine bloods taken for diagnostic tests and used to determine haptoglobin phenotype distribution by electrophoresis. Phenotype differences as percent of phenotype frequency in patient and control groups were analysed using the χ 2 test and SPSS software. A high frequency of serum Hp2-2 haptoglobin phenotype in patients and healthy control were found (62.5% and 58.3% respectively). A meaningful statistical correlation between high frequency of Hp2-2 haptoglobin phenotype and AMI was not found (p value = 0.484). Whereas high frequency of Hp1-1 and HP2-2 phenotypes was associated with hyperlipidemia and hypertension respectively (p value = 0.01 and 0.04). Our results showed that there was a high frequency of Hp2-2 haptoglobin phenotype in patients as well as healthy controls in the population studies. High frequencies of Hp1-1and Hp2-2 phenotypes were associated with AMI in patients with hyperlipidemia and hypertension respectively. Thus these phenotypes in AMI patients may modulate the inflammatory response in combination with hyperlipidemia and hypertension.
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