Your heart is as strong as your Dad’s

by YankeeJim | February 9, 2012 at 03:19 am
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Father and Son | Photo 02

Father and Son | Photo 02

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Your heart is as strong as your Dad’s

Get skinny

Here is a story that adds to the evidence that your father’s heart history may have bearing on yours. DNA inheritance is a factor. Good news is that diet and exercise can help mitigate the risks.


“Men can inherit a form of heart disease from father via Y chromosome

By Michelle Roberts Health reporter, BBC News

Men can inherit heart disease from their father say scientists who have tracked the condition to the Y chromosome that dads pass to sons.

By studying the DNA of over 3,000 men they found a particular version of the sex chromosome increases the risk of coronary artery disease by 50%.

As many as one in five British men carry this version of Y.

And the risk it confers is in addition to other heart risk factors like cholesterol, The Lancet reports.

Experts already know that men develop heart disease a decade earlier than women, on average. By the age of 40, the lifetime risk of heart disease is one in two for men and one in three for women.

Lifestyle factors like smoking and blood pressure are important contributors. This latest work suggests the male Y chromosome can also play a role in coronary artery disease - a common form of heart disease that kills thousands each year in the UK.

Dr Maciej Tomaszewski, from the University of Leicester, and colleagues studied 3,233 biologically unrelated British men who were already enrolled in other medical studies investigating heart disease risk.

When they carried out genetic tests on the men they found that 90% possessed one of two common versions of Y chromosome - named haplogroup I and haplogroup R1b1b2.

And the risk of coronary artery disease among the men carrying the haplogroup I version was 50% higher than in other men.

The scientists say they now need to pinpoint precisely which genes on the Y chromosome are responsible.

But they believe they already know how they exert their effect - by upsetting a man's immune system.

Dr Maciej Tomaszewski, a clinical senior lecturer at the University's Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, said: "We are very excited about these findings as they put the Y chromosome on the map of genetic susceptibility to coronary artery disease.

"Doctors usually associated the Y chromosome with maleness and fertility but this shows it is also implicated in heart disease."

He said, ultimately, the discovery could lead to new ways to treat and prevent heart disease in men, as well as a genetic test to spot those greatest risk.

In the meantime, he said men should focus on risk factors that they already have the power to modify themselves, such as getting enough exercise and eating a healthy diet to keep their blood pressure and cholesterol down.

Dr Hélène Wilson of the British Heart Foundation, which part-funded the work, said: "Coronary heart disease is the cause of heart attacks, which claim the lives of around 50,000 UK men every year.

"Lifestyle choices such as poor diet and smoking are major causes, but inherited factors carried in DNA are also part of the picture. The next step is to identify specifically which genes are responsible and how they might increase heart attack risk."”

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"thirty-aught-six"

If it exist as a dominate gene you could very well inherit that gene. However genetics, DNA, is a crap shoot and no one can predict with exact certainty what is genetically transferred as heredity. Even if you do a DNA test and find you have that particular gene it does not mean it is active. There is such a thing as inactive genes. More fear mongering b.s. if you ask me. I really feel sorry for those people who die of lung cancer and have never been around anyone that smoked in their whole life. While some people who smoke like chimneys live into their 90's. What's that, genetic karma in play? If you live moderately and don't fill your head with a lot of fear mongering about dying of this or dying of that you will probably not live beyond the norm, BUT, your life will be much less stressful and much more enjoyable. Quality not quantity. Same goes for this whole cholesterol obsession. The Nordic and Celts people have genetically higher cholesterol levels than the US stated norms and those countries have some of the highest life expectancy rates. Certainly beating out the US by a large margin. The US is down in the 30's on the list of countries life expectancy rates.

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First Flagged at 4:23 AM, Feb 9, 2012 by liamssoft
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