Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings

First degree relatives (FDRs) of subjects with early onset of coronary heart disease (CHD) have higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease. We verified early CHD by angiography in the index patients and extensively phenotyped their FDRs to investigate the relationship of traditional and non-t...

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Main Author: Taraboanta, Catalin
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/721
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-7212018-01-05T17:22:40Z Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings Taraboanta, Catalin Cardiovascular risk factors Calcium artery Carotid ultrasound Family history Calcium scoring First degree relatives (FDRs) of subjects with early onset of coronary heart disease (CHD) have higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease. We verified early CHD by angiography in the index patients and extensively phenotyped their FDRs to investigate the relationship of traditional and non-traditional cardiovascular risk factors to carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium scoring findings. B-mode carotid ultrasound was used to assess the combined intima-media thickness and plaque burden in 111 FDRs. The biochemical and anthropometrical characteristics of the FDRs were compared with those of healthy controls matched for sex, age, ethnicity and BMI. Odds ratios indicate that FDRs are more likely to have positive carotid ultrasound findings compared to controls; 2.23 (95% CI 1.14 – 4.37) for intima-media thickness and 2.3 (95% CI 1.22 - 4.35) for average total thickness. In multivariate analysis positive carotid ultrasound findings were higher in FDRs independent of age, gender, total cholesterol over HDL-c ratio, systolic blood pressure and smoking but not homocysteine which had higher values in FDRs compared to controls. In conclusion FDRs of patients with angiographically confirmed CHD have higher burden of subclinical atherosclerosis even when considered in the context of traditional risk factors. Coronary artery calcium scoring (CAC), assessed by 64-slice multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT), was used to assess burden of subclinical atherosclerosis in 57 FDRs compared to controls. FDRs have a two-fold increase in risk of having CAC positive findings; odds ratios for the 75th percentile was 1.96 (95%CI 1.04 – 3.67, p<0.05) while for the 90th percentile odds ratio was 2.59 (95% 1.232 – 5.473, p<0.05). In summary, the risk of significant CAC findings, measured by 64-slice MDCT, is two-fold higher in FDRs than controls. These findings correlate highly with carotid ultrasound findings in the same cohort. Different thresholds for CAC may be appropriate when assessing male versus female FDRs. Together increased carotid ultrasound findings and CAC scoring results in FDRs of patients with validated early onset of CHD suggest these imaging techniques as potentially useful tools in cardiovascular risk assessment that will go above and beyond the current diagnostic algorithms. Medicine, Faculty of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Department of Graduate 2008-04-17T17:36:04Z 2008-04-17T17:36:04Z 2008 2008-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/721 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 3271841 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cardiovascular risk factors
Calcium artery
Carotid ultrasound
Family history
Calcium scoring
spellingShingle Cardiovascular risk factors
Calcium artery
Carotid ultrasound
Family history
Calcium scoring
Taraboanta, Catalin
Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
description First degree relatives (FDRs) of subjects with early onset of coronary heart disease (CHD) have higher risk of developing cardiovascular disease. We verified early CHD by angiography in the index patients and extensively phenotyped their FDRs to investigate the relationship of traditional and non-traditional cardiovascular risk factors to carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium scoring findings. B-mode carotid ultrasound was used to assess the combined intima-media thickness and plaque burden in 111 FDRs. The biochemical and anthropometrical characteristics of the FDRs were compared with those of healthy controls matched for sex, age, ethnicity and BMI. Odds ratios indicate that FDRs are more likely to have positive carotid ultrasound findings compared to controls; 2.23 (95% CI 1.14 – 4.37) for intima-media thickness and 2.3 (95% CI 1.22 - 4.35) for average total thickness. In multivariate analysis positive carotid ultrasound findings were higher in FDRs independent of age, gender, total cholesterol over HDL-c ratio, systolic blood pressure and smoking but not homocysteine which had higher values in FDRs compared to controls. In conclusion FDRs of patients with angiographically confirmed CHD have higher burden of subclinical atherosclerosis even when considered in the context of traditional risk factors. Coronary artery calcium scoring (CAC), assessed by 64-slice multi-detector computed tomography (MDCT), was used to assess burden of subclinical atherosclerosis in 57 FDRs compared to controls. FDRs have a two-fold increase in risk of having CAC positive findings; odds ratios for the 75th percentile was 1.96 (95%CI 1.04 – 3.67, p<0.05) while for the 90th percentile odds ratio was 2.59 (95% 1.232 – 5.473, p<0.05). In summary, the risk of significant CAC findings, measured by 64-slice MDCT, is two-fold higher in FDRs than controls. These findings correlate highly with carotid ultrasound findings in the same cohort. Different thresholds for CAC may be appropriate when assessing male versus female FDRs. Together increased carotid ultrasound findings and CAC scoring results in FDRs of patients with validated early onset of CHD suggest these imaging techniques as potentially useful tools in cardiovascular risk assessment that will go above and beyond the current diagnostic algorithms. === Medicine, Faculty of === Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Department of === Graduate
author Taraboanta, Catalin
author_facet Taraboanta, Catalin
author_sort Taraboanta, Catalin
title Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
title_short Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
title_full Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
title_fullStr Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
title_full_unstemmed Impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
title_sort impact of family history of premature coronary disease on carotid ultrasound and coronary calcium findings
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/721
work_keys_str_mv AT taraboantacatalin impactoffamilyhistoryofprematurecoronarydiseaseoncarotidultrasoundandcoronarycalciumfindings
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