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Jane Ferguson: Hi everyone. Welcome to Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart, the podcast from Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine . I'm Jane Ferguson and this is episode 30 from July 2019. First up we have a pape...
30 July 2019 is an episode from Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart by American Heart Association. Jane Ferguson: Hi everyone. Welcome to Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart, the podcast from Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine ....
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Published Jul 17, 2019, 10:08 long, audio available.
Jane Ferguson: Hi everyone. Welcome to Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart, the podcast from Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine . I'm Jane Ferguson and this is episode 30 from July 2019. First up we have a paper, the Subtype Specificity of Genetic Loci Associated With Stroke in 16664 cases and 32792 Controls, from Matthew Trailer and colleagues on behalf of the NINDS Stroke Genetics Network and the International Stroke Genetics Consortium. They were interested in understanding whether genetic loci previously found to be associated with stroke have distinct associations with stroke subtypes, specifically ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. They compiled data sets through an international consortium to analyze 16664 stroke cases and 32792 controls, all of European ancestry. The cases were subtyped using two different stroke classification systems: the Trial of ORG 10172 in Acute Stroke Treatment, or TOAST system, and the Causative Classification of Stroke, or CCS system. They selected genetic loci for consideration based on previous association with stroke in general or stroke subtypes in the MEGASTROKE consortium, which had included a large number of the subjects included in the present study. They used a Bayesian multinomial logistic regression approach to evaluate the association of snips at each locus with stroke subtypes identified under the TOAST and CCS classifications, giving five different case groups compared with a set of controls. 16 loci were taken forward for further analysis. There were seven loci which associated with both ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes subtypes, four which clearly associated with either ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke, with the rest showing less consistent effects. One locus, EDNRA, showed opposite affects for ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke. Overall, the findings indicate a large degree of genetic heterogeneity, but some overlap, suggesting common underlying pathophysiological pathways in different stroke subtypes, potentially related to small vessel disease. More detailed phenotyping and further analysis in large samples is required to fully understand genetic mechanisms underlying the risk of different stroke subtypes. And, just to add, this paper was previously submitted to the pre-print server Bio Archive. We support open science and are always happy to consider papers that have been submitted to pre-print servers. So, if you have a particularly cool paper on Bio Archive that fits our scope, do feel free to send it our way. Next up, we have a paper from Fabiola del Greco, Cristian Pattaro, Peter Pramstaller, Alessandera Rossini, and colleagues, from Eurac Research Institute for Biomedicine. This paper, entitled Lipidomics, Atrial Conduction, and Body Mass Index, Evidence from Association, Mediation, and Mendelian Randomization Models, aims to investigate the mechanisms underlying associations between circulating lipids and atrial conduction. They used mass spectrometry measurement of 151 sphingo- and phospholipids in plasma or serum from individuals who had undergone electrocardiogram measurements to ascertain P-wave duration. They first looked for associations in 839 individuals from the micro islets in South Tyrol, or MICROS study, based in Italy, and replicated in 951 participants of the Orkney Complex Disease Study, ORCADES, based in Scotland. They identified and replicated an association between levels of phosphatidylcholine 38-3 and P-wave duration, which was independent of cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose levels. However, the association was mediated by BMI, and suggested that increased BMI may cause both increased levels of PC38-3 and longer P-wave duration, suggesting a role for body mass in altered lipids in atrial electrical activity. The next paper is a research letter from Hana Bangash, Iftikhar Kullo, and colleagues from the Mayo Clinic on Use of Twitter to Promote Awareness of Familial Hypercholesterolemia. Scientists and health professionals are increasingly using Twitter to communicate. This team wondered whether organized awareness campaigns, including Twitter events like Tweetathons, really make a different. They analyzed Twitter activity related to familial hypercholesterolemia in September 2018, during national cholesterol education month, which included an international familial hypercholesterolemia awareness day and Tweetathon. They also analyzed tweets from August and October 2018, where there was no formal awareness campaign and compared the FH Twitter activity with that of colorectal cancer, which did not have any formal awareness campaigns at that time. In September, FH-related tweets increased by 152.9% compared to August, and then declined by over 58% in October. The topic reach for familial hypercholesterolemia was 11.1 million in August, and increased over 250% in September to 37.7 million. The reach declined by over 71% in October to just over 10 million. In comparison, the reach for colorectal cancer declined from 453 million in August to 300 million in September and then increased to 677 million in October, which happened to be breast cancer awareness month. These data suggest that awareness campaigns like national cholesterol education month do lead to an increase in Twitter activity. However, this increase isn't necessarily sustained during the following month, and it remains unclear whether Twitter activity actually translates into a wider awareness amongst providers or patients, which could translate into clinical benefits. Nonetheless, as the use of Twitter increases, this may be a promising avenue to promote awareness and to disseminate knowledge. And, of course, I have to take this opportunity to mention that Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine is on Twitter and you can
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30 July 2019 is an episode from Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart by American Heart Association.
This episode is 10:08 long.
This episode was published on Jul 17, 2019.
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30 July 2019 is from Getting Personal: Omics of the Heart by American Heart Association.
Published Jul 17, 2019 and 10:08 long