Een
broer of zus met hartproblemen, pas dan zelf op.*
Uit
een grootschalige en langjarige studie blijkt dat als in je een broer of zus
hebt die last heeft van hart- of vaatproblemen jij zelf ook duidelijk, wel 45%,
meer kans hebt om ook een dergelijk probleem te krijgen. Eerder was al
onderzocht dat er een verband was tussen ouders en kinderen nu blijkt dat er een
nog zwaarder wegend verband blijkt te zijn tussen kinderen onderling. Dus ook al
lijk je gezond pas op als een broer of zus een hartaanval of beroerte krijgen.
Having
A Sibling With Heart Disease Significantly Raises Personal Heart Disease Risk
Having a sibling with a history of
cardiovascular disease carries the same or greater risk as having a parent with
a history of the disease, according to a new report from the long-standing
Framingham Heart Study conducted by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute (NHLBI), a part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Personal
risk of having a cardiovascular event, such as a heart
attack, stroke, or peripheral artery disease, may be
raised by as much as 45 percent in middle-aged people whose brother or sister
has had such an event.
The study appears in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
Even when data was adjusted for the fact that siblings may have similar
lifestyle-related risk factors and may be of similar ages, the risk associated
with having a sibling with cardiovascular disease remained high.
Physicians determine relative risk for cardiovascular disease by evaluating
known risk factors: family history of heart disease, age, high blood pressure,
high cholesterol, overweight, current or former smoking, physical inactivity,
and diabetes. While
having a parent or sibling with heart disease has long been suggested to
increase risk, this study shows that having a sibling with heart disease is a
significant risk factor independent of other measures.
“This study illustrates that even people who are not at high risk based on
their own health status should talk to their doctors about the history of heart
disease in their families, among siblings as well as parents, and ask what they
can do to prevent a heart attack or stroke,” said NHLBI Director Elizabeth G. Nabel, M.D.
Researchers evaluated siblings from among 1188 men and 1287 women, all
participants in the Framingham Heart Study. Participants were at least 30 years
old at the time of a baseline examination, and were followed for eight years for
the occurrence of a cardiovascular disease event.
“We determined that one's risk
from a sibling with a cardiovascular disease event remains elevated after taking
into account age and other risk factors that may cluster within families. The
risk may be even higher than the risk related to having a parent with
cardiovascular disease,” said Joanne Murabito, MD, ScM, of Boston University,
the study's lead author. “The risk from a sibling with cardiovascular disease
is significant even in persons with borderline elevated levels of total
cholesterol, levels at which physicians are often undecided about medication
treatment.”
The Framingham Study is one of the first studies to take an independent,
unbiased look at sibling risk. Unlike other studies of family history, which
relied on often-unreliable participant recall, this study evaluated independent
data from families within the 57-year-long observational study. Participants in
this evaluation were from the study's Offspring group, the adult children of the
original participants who first enrolled in the 1940s and 1950s.
“Our findings suggests that taking an accurate family history should be a
crucial part of every physician's method of assessing heart disease risk, and
should go beyond a simple ‘yes' or ‘no' question about the presence of
disease in the family,” said Dr. Murabito.
Patients should make the effort to collect medical history information from
their siblings and parents and make sure to inform their siblings if they have a
cardiovascular disease event such as a heart attack or stroke, she added.
“We believe that the reasons behind the strong association of risk between
siblings are environmental as well as genetic. In addition to sharing the same
genetic makeup, siblings may share similar dietary habits and physical activity
patterns in their early years while living in the same household. These habits
may continue on into adulthood when genetic factors begin to manifest,”
Christopher O'Donnell, MD, MPH, associate director of NHLBI's Framingham Heart
Study and the study senior author.
“While you can't control your family history, there are many things you can do
to control your risk for heart disease, including keeping your blood pressure,
cholesterol and blood sugar under control, maintaining a healthy weight,
avoiding smoking, and getting regular physical activity,” said Dr. O'Donnell.
In May of 2004, the Framingham Heart Study research team demonstrated that
having a parent with a cardiovascular disease history doubles personal risk of
the disease.
For more information about heart disease risk factors and the Framingham Heart
Study, visit the NHLBI Web site at www.nhlbi.nih.gov.
Information about taking a personal family history can be found at the U.S.
Surgeon General's website “My Family Health Portrait” (familyhistory.hhs.gov)
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) - The Nation's Medical Research Agency -
includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a component of the U. S. Department of
Health and Human Services. It is the primary Federal agency for conducting and
supporting basic, clinical, and translational medical research, and it
investigates the causes, treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases.
For more information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
(
Januari 2006)