Journal article
Sex differences in genetic and environmental determinants of pulse pressure
KJ Scurrah, GB Byrnes, JL Hopper, SB Harrap
Genetic Epidemiology | WILEY-LISS | Published : 2006
DOI: 10.1002/gepi.20156
Abstract
Pulse pressure (PP) is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease. PP rises with age, more so in women. We examined sex differences in the correlations and variance components of PP in adult subjects from 767 nuclear families, enriched with those containing twins, from the Victorian Family Heart Study. After adjusting for age, we found no significant differences in the means or variances of PP in males and females. Under the assumption of no sex differences, the proportions of variance due to shared genes, shared environment, and individual-specific environment were 20%, 23% and 57%, respectively. However, same-sex relative pairs had significantly higher correlations than opposite..
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