👤 Donna Vine

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2
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2
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Also published as: Anna E Vine,
articles
Xiaoying Wu, Mich Wilke, Jesse Batara +7 more · 2025 · Frontiers in endocrinology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is associated with increased cardiometabolic risk in young women of reproductive age. There are limited studies on atherogenic dyslipidemia, inclusive of triglycerides Show more
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is associated with increased cardiometabolic risk in young women of reproductive age. There are limited studies on atherogenic dyslipidemia, inclusive of triglycerides (TG), Apolipoprotein (apo) B-lipoproteins and remnant-cholesterol (C), atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ACVD), cardiac function and remodeling in young women with and without PCOS. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate the relationship of atherogenic dyslipidemia and other cardiometabolic risk factors with ACVD, cardiac function-remodeling in high-risk young overweight-obese PCOS women compared to non-PCOS and healthy-weight controls. Women with and without PCOS (non-PCOS control) aged 18 - 45 years who were overweight and obese (>25kg/m PCOS (n=48) and non-PCOS control overweight-obese age-BMI matched groups (n=19) were shown to have significantly higher fasting and non-fasting lipids including TG, remnant-C, total ApoB and ApoB48, compared to healthy-weight non-PCOS controls (n=10). PCOS and non-PCOS control overweight-obese groups had significantly higher SBP, DBP, cIMT and evidence of cardiac dysfunction and remodeling, with reduced Mitral E/A ratio, intraventricular (IV) relaxation time and increased Left ventricle (LV) end diastolic and systolic diameter, LV posterior wall thickness and IV septal thickness, compared to healthy-weight non-PCOS controls. Individuals with PCOS had significantly higher fasting plasma TG and remnant-C compared to the non-PCOS overweight-obese control group. The PCOS group tended to have 25% higher carotid plaque height, although this was not significant, compared to the non-PCOS overweight-obese control group. DBP, HOMA-IR and ApoB predicted 40% of the variability in cIMT and ApoB was shown to predict 14% of the variability in carotid plaque height, independent of age and BMI. A 1mg/ml increase in ApoB was associated with a 0.041mm increase in cIMT and a 0.75mm increase in carotid plaque height in all young women. Our pilot results supports the potential of apoB-dyslipidemia, cIMT, carotid plaque height and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction and remodeling to be used in screening for CVD risk in high-risk populations such as overweight-obese women with and without PCOS. ApoB may be useful to predict atherosclerotic vascular burden and progression of cIMT and carotid plaque, and could be used to develop a female specific algorithm for ACVD risk in high-risk young women with and without PCOS. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2025.1520922
APOB
Anna E Vine, Andrew McQuillin, Nicholas J Bass +8 more · 2009 · Psychiatric genetics · added 2026-04-24
Recent studies have reported large common regions of homozygosity (ROHs) that are the result of autozygosity, that is, the cooccurrence within individuals of long haplotypes that have a high frequency Show more
Recent studies have reported large common regions of homozygosity (ROHs) that are the result of autozygosity, that is, the cooccurrence within individuals of long haplotypes that have a high frequency in the population. A recent study reports that such regions are found more commonly in individuals with schizophrenia compared with controls, and identified nine 'risk ROHs' that were individually more common in cases. Of these, four contained or neighboured genes associated with schizophrenia (NOS1AP/UHMK1, ATF2, NSF and PIK3C3). We have applied the same methodology to a UK sample of 506 cases with bipolar disorder and 510 controls. There was no overall excess of common ROHs among bipolar individuals. With one exception, the haplotypes accounting for the ROHs appeared to be distributed according to the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. One ROH was individually more common among cases (uncorrected P = 0.0003). This ROH spanned the chromosome 2p23.3 gene ITSN2 (the gene for intersectin 2 isoform 2). However, inspection of the homozygous haplotypes and haplotype-based tests for association failed to provide a clearer understanding of why this ROH was occurring more commonly. Overall, we conclude that, in contrast with schizophrenia, common ROHs are rarely associated with susceptibility to bipolar disorder. This supports the idea that predominantly different genes are increasing susceptibility to schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorders. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1097/YPG.0b013e32832a4faa
PIK3C3