Gu Dongfeng, Rice Treva, Wang Shiping, Yang Wenjie, Gu Chi, Chen Chung-Shiuan, Hixson James E, Jaquish Cashell E, Yao Zhi-Jian, Liu De-Pei, Rao Dabeeru C, He Jiang
Cardiovascular Institute and Fu Wai Hospital, Beijing, China.
Hypertension. 2007 Jul;50(1):116-22. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.088310. Epub 2007 May 7.
The heritability of blood pressure responses to dietary intervention has not been well studied. We examined the heritability of blood pressure responses to dietary sodium and potassium intake in a family feeding study among 1906 study participants living in rural North China. The dietary intervention included a 7-day low-sodium feeding (51.3 mmol per day), a 7-day high-sodium feeding (307.8 mmol per day), and a 7-day high-sodium plus potassium supplementation (60 mmol per day). Blood pressure was measured 9 times during the 3-day baseline period preceding the intervention and also during the last 3 days of each intervention phase using a random-zero sphygmomanometer. Heritability was computed using maximum likelihood methods under a variance components model as implemented in the computer program SOLAR. The heritabilities of baseline blood pressure were 0.31 for systolic, 0.32 for diastolic, and 0.34 for mean arterial pressure. The heritabilities increased significantly under dietary intervention and were 0.49, 0.49, and 0.51 during low sodium; 0.47, 0.49, and 0.51 during high sodium; and 0.51, 0.52, and 0.53 during potassium supplementation for systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure, respectively. The heritabilities for percentage of blood pressure responses to low sodium were 0.20, 0.21, and 0.23; to high-sodium were 0.22, 0.33, and 0.33; and to potassium supplementation were 0.24, 0.21, and 0.25 for systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial pressure, respectively. Our study indicated that the heritabilities of blood pressure under controlled dietary sodium and potassium intake were significantly higher than those under a usual diet. In addition, the heritabilities of blood pressure responses to dietary sodium and potassium intake were moderate in this study population.
饮食干预对血压反应的遗传性尚未得到充分研究。我们在一项针对生活在中国北方农村的1906名研究参与者的家庭喂养研究中,检测了饮食中钠和钾摄入量对血压反应的遗传性。饮食干预包括为期7天的低钠饮食(每天51.3毫摩尔)、为期7天的高钠饮食(每天307.8毫摩尔)以及为期7天的高钠加钾补充饮食(每天60毫摩尔)。在干预前的3天基线期以及每个干预阶段的最后3天,使用随机零点血压计测量9次血压。遗传性通过计算机程序SOLAR中实施的方差成分模型下的最大似然法计算得出。基线血压的遗传性分别为:收缩压0.31、舒张压0.32、平均动脉压0.34。在饮食干预下遗传性显著增加,低钠饮食期间分别为0.49、0.49和0.51;高钠饮食期间分别为0.47、0.49和0.51;钾补充饮食期间分别为0.51、0.52和0.53,对应收缩压、舒张压和平均动脉压。血压对低钠反应的遗传性分别为:收缩压0.20、舒张压0.21、平均动脉压0.23;对高钠反应的遗传性分别为:收缩压0.22、舒张压0.33、平均动脉压0.33;对钾补充反应的遗传性分别为:收缩压0.24、舒张压0.21、平均动脉压0.25。我们的研究表明,在控制饮食中钠和钾摄入量的情况下,血压的遗传性显著高于常规饮食情况下的遗传性。此外,在该研究人群中,血压对饮食中钠和钾摄入量反应的遗传性为中等水平。