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Disease of the heart and arteries remains major cause of mortality and morbidity in the Western World

Published on October 1, 2009 at 5:00 AM · No Comments

Researchers at the University of Hertfordshire are screening up to 400 students from various ethnic groups to gauge their predisposition to heart disease in later life.

Professor Nigel Baber (Clinical Trials Co-ordinating Centre) and Dr Andrew Garrett (School of Life Sciences) have joined forces with researchers from the Universities of Cambridge and Cardiff in the British Heart Foundation-funded Enigma-E research project into heart and blood vessel health.

According to the researchers, disease of the heart and arteries remains the major cause of mortality and morbidity in the Western World.  Moreover, as more ethnic groups adopt Western lifestyles, the incidence of heart and arterial disease is rapidly increasing in these diverse populations.

As a result, the collaborative University teams are assessing students from various ethnic groups in the University's Human Physiology Laboratories up to next Wednesday (7 October) and plan to collect blood samples and freeze the serum so that they can follow up the students over a thirty-year period to detect any changes in their health.

"It is known that certain ethnic groups are at much greater risk than others and we are particularly interested in this," said Professor Baber. "Therefore, to help predict who is at risk we need to look at lots of young people from various ethnic backgrounds to work out what predisposes people to getting heart disease."

Enigma-E researchers at the University of Cambridge approached Professor Nigel Baber and Dr Garrett to carry out this research because the University of Hertfordshire has one of the most diverse student populations in the UK with over forty percent of students coming from non-European ethnic groups.

Dr Garrett plans to offer selective students from the various ethnic populations who participate in this research a free follow-up moderate exercise and nutritional analysis.  This will determine their level of physical conditioning and current dietary regime.

http://www.herts.ac.uk/

Posted in: Medical Condition News

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