1. Heritability of ambulatory and beat-to-beat office blood pressure in large multigenerational Arab pedigrees: the 'Oman Family study'
- Author
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V. Saeed Al-Yahyaee, Zahir M. Al-Anqoudi, Harold Snieder, Deepali Jaju, Riad Bayoumi, Anthony G. Comuzzie, Juan Carlos López-Alvarenga, M. Loretto Munoz, Syed Rizvi, Mohammed O. Hassan, Sulayma Albarwani, V. Saroja Voruganti, and Life Course Epidemiology (LCE)
- Subjects
Male ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,STRESS ,Oman ,Diastole ,Pedigree chart ,PHENOTYPES ,Blood Pressure ,DETERMINANTS ,heritability ,DAYTIME ,Heart Rate ,Heart rate ,Medicine ,Humans ,Operations management ,Family ,ambulatory blood pressure ,Genetics (clinical) ,beat-to-beat blood pressure ,HYPERTENSION ,business.industry ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Heritability ,Omani pedigrees ,Arabs ,Pedigree ,Blood pressure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Ambulatory ,Cohort ,Female ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Objective: To estimate the heritability of ambulatory blood pressure (BP), heart rate (HR), and beat-to-beat office BP and HR in an isolated, environmentally and genetically homogeneous Omani Arab population. Methods: Ambulatory BP measurements were recorded in 1,124 subjects with a mean age of 33.8 ± 16.2 years, using the auscultatory mode of the validated Schiller ambulatory BP Monitor. Beat-to-beat BP and HR were recorded by the Task Force Monitor. Heritability was estimated using quantitative genetic analysis. This was achieved by applying the maximum-likelihood-based variance decomposition method implemented in SOLAR software. Results: We detected statistically significant heritability estimates for office beat-to-beat, 24-hour, daytime, and sleep HR of 0.31, 0.21, 0.20, and 0.07, respectively. Heritability estimates in the abovementioned conditions for systolic BP (SBP)/diastolic BP (DBP)/mean BP (MBP) were all significant and estimated at 0.19/0.19/0.19, 0.30/0.44/0.41, 0.28/0.38/0.39, and 0.21/0.18/0.20, respectively. Heritability estimates for 24-hour and daytime ambulatory SBP, DBP, and MBP ranged from 0.28 to 0.44, and were higher than the heritability estimates for beat-to-beat recordings and sleep periods, which were estimated within a narrow range of 0.18–0.21. Conclusion: In this cohort, because shared environments are common to all, the environmental influence that occurs is primarily due to the variation in non-shared environment that is unique to the individual. We demonstrated significant heritability estimates for both beat-to-beat office and ambulatory BP and HR recordings, but 24-hour and daytime ambulatory heritabilities are higher than those from beat-to-beat resting levels and ambulatory night-time recordings.
- Published
- 2012