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Scandinavian Journal of Public Health 2010-Jul

Alcohol drinking habits, alcohol dehydrogenase genotypes and risk of acute coronary syndrome.

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Janne S Tolstrup
Jane L Hansen
Morten Grønbaek
Ulla Vogel
Anne Tjønneland
Albert Marni Joensen
Kim Overvad

Keywords

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

The risk of myocardial infarction is lower among light-to-moderate drinkers compared with abstainers. Results from some previous studies, but not all, suggest that this association is modified by variations in genes coding for alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH). We aimed to test this hypothesis, including alcohol as both the amount of alcohol and the frequency of drinking.

METHODS

we conducted a nested case-cohort study within the Danish Diet, Cancer and Health study, including 1,645 men (770 incident cases of acute coronary syndrome from 1993-1997 through 2004 and 875 randomly selected controls).

RESULTS

Higher alcohol intake (measured as amount or drinking frequency) was associated with lower risk of acute coronary syndrome; however, there was no evidence that these finding were modified by ADH1B or ADH1C genotypes.

CONCLUSIONS

The importance of functional variation in alcohol dehydrogenase for the association between alcohol drinking habits and the risk of developing acute coronary syndrome, if any, is very limited.

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