Cardiovascular Risk Factors Associated With Insulin Resistance Cluster in Families With Early-Onset Coronary Heart Disease

2001 
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is a multifactorial disease caused by environmental and genetic factors. CHD clusters in families, but it is not known whether susceptibility to early-onset CHD is associated with the clustering of cardiovascular risk factors. Therefore, we determined the levels of cardiovascular risk factors among siblings with and without severe early-onset CHD drawn from 101 Finnish families. Probands with CHD, compared with their siblings without CHD, had, respectively, higher 2-hour insulin levels (475.7 versus 331.8 pmol/L, P =0.011) and 2-hour insulin areas (796.2 versus 640.4 pmol/L per hour, P =0.031) in an oral glucose tolerance test, lower high density lipoprotein cholesterol levels (1.22 versus 1.42 mmol/L, P =0.001), higher total triglyceride levels (1.91 versus 1.68 mmol/L, P =0.018), higher very low density lipoprotein triglyceride levels (1.25 versus 1.06 mmol/L, P =0.011), and higher fibrinogen levels (3.8 versus 3.4 g/L, P = 0.008). No significant differences were found in cardiovascular risk factors between affected siblings and probands with CHD. Environmental or lifestyle factors did not differ between siblings with or without early-onset CHD. We conclude that cardiovascular risk factors associated with the insulin resistance syndrome (hyperinsulinemia, low high density lipoprotein cholesterol, high total and very low density lipoprotein triglycerides, and high fibrinogen) are likely to contribute indirectly to early-onset CHD.
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