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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Pediatrics

Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library, The George Washington University

Cardiovascular Diseases

Publication Year

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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

How Complicated Can It Be? The Link Between Apol1 Risk Variants And Lipoprotein Heterogeneity In Kidney And Cardiovascular Diseases., Chien-An A Hu, Patricio E Ray Apr 2016

How Complicated Can It Be? The Link Between Apol1 Risk Variants And Lipoprotein Heterogeneity In Kidney And Cardiovascular Diseases., Chien-An A Hu, Patricio E Ray

Pediatrics Faculty Publications

The beginning of human apolipoprotein L1 study (gene: APOL1; protein: ApoL1) originated from the identification of circulating ApoL1 as an interacting protein of ApoA1 and a minor component of high-density lipoprotein subfraction 3 (HDL3) in 1997 [1]. In the past 18 years, ApoL1 has been investigated in the context of complex human diseases such as African sleeping sickness, schizophrenia, host innate immunity, cancer, hyperlipidemia, cardiovascular diseases, stroke and type 2 diabetes [2–10]. A major breakthrough, however, was the documentation of two haplotypes of APOL1, harboring three coding-sequence mutations as risk variants associated with non-diabetic …


Aspirin Use And Knowledge In The Community: A Population- And Health Facility Based Survey For Measuring Local Health System Performance., Gregory A Roth, Catherine W. Gillespie, Ali A Mokdad, Danny D Shen, David W Fleming, Andy Stergachis, Christopher J L Murray, Ali H Mokdad Jan 2014

Aspirin Use And Knowledge In The Community: A Population- And Health Facility Based Survey For Measuring Local Health System Performance., Gregory A Roth, Catherine W. Gillespie, Ali A Mokdad, Danny D Shen, David W Fleming, Andy Stergachis, Christopher J L Murray, Ali H Mokdad

Pediatrics Faculty Publications

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the relationship between cardiovascular risk, disease and actual use of aspirin in the community.

METHODS: The Measuring Disparities in Chronic Conditions (MDCC) study is a community and health facility-based survey designed to track disparities in the delivery of health interventions for common chronic diseases. MDCC includes a survey instrument designed to collect detailed information about aspirin use. In King County, WA between 2011 and 2012, we surveyed 4633 white, African American, or Hispanic adults (45% home address-based sample, 55% health facility sample). We examined self-reported counseling on, frequency of use and risks of aspirin for …