jueves, 12 de abril de 2012

Stroke risk considerably higher if sibling had stroke / American Heart Association

Stroke risk considerably higher if sibling had stroke / American Heart Association


Stroke risk considerably higher if sibling had stroke

Study Highlights:
  • If your brother or sister had a stroke, your risk of having one may be at least 60 percent higher.
  • Your risk of stroke at age 55 or younger is almost double if your sibling had a stroke at 55 or younger.
  • Make sure to tell your doctor if any of your siblings had a stroke, and pay greater attention to the things that put you at risk for a stroke, such as poor diet, lack of exercise and high blood pressure.
Video story available on newsroom.heart.org as the Featured Video.
 
EMBARGOED UNTIL 3 pm CT/4 pm ET, Tuesday, April 10
DALLAS, April 10, 2012 – If your brother or sister had a stroke External link, you may be at least 60 percent more likely to have one too, according to research reported in the American Heart Association journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.
 
The findings come from the first large study to examine the combined influence of age, gender and sibling history on stroke risk. The study focused on ischemic strokes External link, which are caused by blood vessel blockage that cuts off blood flow to part of the brain. Ischemic strokes are by far the most common type, striking almost 700,000 Americans annually.
 
The study also found that if your sibling was 55 or younger at the time of the stroke, your risk of having one at 55 or younger is almost doubled, said Erik Ingelsson, M.D., Ph.D., senior author of the study and professor of cardiovascular epidemiology at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden.
 
“Health professionals should pay as much attention to a family history of stroke in siblings as in parents, and make patients aware that a genetic predisposition exists,” Ingelsson said. “The gender of either sibling did not influence the stroke risk.”
 
Swedish researchers studied national health records from 1987 to 2007. For each stroke diagnosed, they tracked whether a sibling had a stroke during the remainder of the study period.
 
The investigators found that ischemic strokes were:
  • 94 percent more likely to occur at age 55 or younger in siblings of affected patients whose stroke occurred at 55 or younger.
  • 64 percent more likely in full siblings of affected patients;
  • 61 percent more likely in any siblings of affected patients;
  • 41 percent more likely in half-siblings of affected patients;
The increased familial risk may not solely be due to genetics, Ingelsson said. Similar lifestyle habits within families also could be at work – and those can be changed.
 
“If your sibling has had a stroke, it should motivate you to take more preventive actions and to pay more attention to lifestyle habits such as diet, exercise and blood pressure control,” Ingelsson said.
 
Because there was no information on other medical risk factors for ischemic stroke, such as high blood pressure External link and abnormal cholesterol levels External link, the researchers could not determine whether the familial influence heightened stroke risk directly or through genetic and environmental influences.
 
Researchers analyzed hospital discharge and cause of death records in 30,735 people who had a sibling with a stroke and 152,391 adults of a similar age with no history of a sibling having a stroke. At the time of their sibling’s stroke, people averaged 64 years old.
 
The study is limited by the lack of information on subtypes of ischemic stroke that may carry different inherited risks, authors said.
 
Co-authors are Katherine Kasiman, M.Sc.; Cecilia Lundholm, M.Sc.; Sven Sandin, M.Sc.; Ninoa Malki, M.Sc.; and Pär Sparén, Ph.D. Author disclosures are on the manuscript.
 
The study was supported by a grant from the Swedish Research Council.
 
For more information on stroke visit the StrokeAssociation.org External link. Fill out the My Family Health Tree External link to see which conditions in your family may affect you.
 
###
 
Statements and conclusions of study authors published in American Heart Association scientific journals are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect the association’s policy or position. The association makes no representation or guarantee as to their accuracy or reliability. The association receives funding primarily from individuals; foundations and corporations (including pharmaceutical, device manufacturers and other companies) also make donations and fund specific association programs and events. The association has strict policies to prevent these relationships from influencing the science content. Revenues from pharmaceutical and device corporations are available at www.heart.org/corporatefunding External link.
 
NR12 – 1055 (CircGenetics/Ingelsson)
 
Additional resources, including multimedia, are available in the right column.
 
For Media Inquiries: (214) 706-1173
Maggie Francis: (214) 706-1382; maggie.francis@heart.org
Karen Astle: (214) 706-1392; karen.astle@heart.org
Julie Del Barto (broadcast): (214) 706-1330; julie.delbarto@heart.org
For Public Inquiries: (800) AHA-USA1 (242-8721) 
 
dr goldstein-sibling stroke-overview
dr goldstein-sibling stroke-overview

dr goldstein-sibling stroke-overview

Larry B. Goldstein MD Spokesperson for the American Heart Association Professor of Medicine, Neurology Director, Duke Stroke Center

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario