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The angiotensinogen gene (M235T) and the acute myocardial infarction

OBJECTIVE: To study the effect of the angiotensinogen gene M235T polymorphism on coronary artery disease and its severity in patients with and without acute myocardial infarction. METHODS: A cross sectional study was carried out with 305 Caucasians who were divided into two groups. One group with 201 patients with coronary artery disease proven by coronary angiography (obstructive lesion > 50%) was further divided into two subgroups; 110 patients with acute myocardial infarction and 91 without it. The control group consisted of 104 individuals with normal coronary arteries. Three angiographic criteria were evaluated to determine severity of the coronary artery disease: number of diseased vessels, morphology of the atherosclerosis plaque and jeopardy score. Risk factors were also analyzed. Gene polymorphism was evaluated by the polymerase chain reaction followed by restriction endonuclease digestion. RESULTS: The angiotensinogen gene TT, MT and MM genotypic frequencies were neither statistically different between coronary artery disease patients and controls (?2 = 0.123; p = 0.939) nor between the acute myocardial infarction subgroup (?2 = 2.171; p = 0.338). The coronary artery disease and acute myocardial infarction risk analyzed between TT vs. MM, MT vs. MM and TT+MT vs. MM genotypes were not significant. The severity of atherosclerotic disease analysis within the group of patients with coronary artery disease showed no correlation with the genotypes. Similar results were found between groups with and without acute myocardial infarction. CONCLUSIONS: No association was found between the angiotensinogen gene M235T polymorphism and coronary artery disease, neither with its severity nor with acute myocardial infarction.

Coronary artery disease; Acute myocardial infarction; Renin-angiotensin system; Angiotensinogen M235T gene polymorphism


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