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Release Date: Nov. 22, 2004
FAMILY HISTORY PREDICTS YOUNG WOMEN’S RISK OF STROKE
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Young women with a family history of stroke in their parents or siblings may
be at increased risk for stroke themselves, according to a new report.
The risk of a blocked vessel stroke increases nearly twofold in young women
with a history of stroke in any first-degree relative, Helen Kim, Ph.D., of
the University of Washington and colleagues conclude in the December issue
of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The researchers also found
a 2.4-fold increase in the risk of ruptured-vessel stroke among women with
a family history of the vascular disease.
The Washington state women interviewed
by Kim and colleagues ranged in age from 18 to 44 — relatively young
for stroke victims.
“A positive family history of stroke is thought to be an important risk
factor for stroke, although this relationship is not clearly established. The
few studies that have examined this association have mainly focused on middle-aged
to elderly populations and the results have been inconsistent,” Kim says.
“Strokes are of particular concern in these early-onset cases because
of the potential for serious, long-term disability and associated healthcare
costs,” she adds.
The researchers compared 109 Washington state young women diagnosed with stroke
to 428 young women without a stroke who lived in the same areas of Washington
state and were of similar age and background. Almost half of the women who
had a stroke reported having a family history of the disease.
The effect of family history remained even after accounting for other factors
such as diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, physical activity,
smoking and alcohol use and family history of heart disease, Kim and colleagues
found.
However, the researchers concluded that high blood pressure and smoking were
good independent predictors of the risk of ruptured-vessel strokes. Diabetes,
high blood pressure, lack of exercise and body mass index predicted the risk
of blocked-vessel strokes.
Kim and colleagues say it’s unclear exactly why a family history of
stroke affects a woman’s risk of stroke at any age.
“Considering that stroke is the second major cause of mortality in women,
further research should be focused on identifying the reasons for familial
aggregation of stroke, be they genetic, environmental or, more likely, a combination
of both,” Kim says.
The study was supported by the National Institute for Child Health and Human
Development and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute.
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