AI Article Synopsis

  • * Researchers conducted a post-mortem genome-wide screening on 30 autopsy cases to identify genetic markers that may be linked to SCD, discovering numerous novel genetic variants.
  • * Many of the identified genetic variants relate to lipid, cholesterol, and drug metabolism, indicating their potential roles as risk factors for SCD; however, further research is needed to validate these findings.

Article Abstract

Sudden cardiac death (SCD) is an unexpected natural death due to cardiac causes, usually happening within one hour of symptom manifestation or in individuals in good health up to 24 h before the event. Genomic screening has been increasingly applied as a useful approach to detecting the genetic variants that potentially contribute to SCD and helping the evaluation of SCD cases in the post-mortem setting. Our aim was to identify the genetic markers associated with SCD, which might enable its target screening and prevention. In this scope, a case-control analysis through the post-mortem genome-wide screening of 30 autopsy cases was performed. We identified a high number of novel genetic variants associated with SCD, of which 25 polymorphisms were consistent with a previous link to cardiovascular diseases. We ascertained that many genes have been already linked to cardiovascular system functioning and diseases and that the metabolisms most implicated in SCD are the lipid, cholesterol, arachidonic acid, and drug metabolisms, suggesting their roles as potential risk factors. Overall, the genetic variants pinpointed herein might be useful markers of SCD, but the novelty of these results requires further investigations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10298681PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes14061265DOI Listing

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