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Meta-Analysis of Genome-Wide Association Studies Reveals Genetic Mechanisms of Supraventricular Arrhythmias.

Lu-Chen WangShaan KhurshidAmelia Weber HallVictor NauffalValerie N MorrillYan V SunJoel T RämöDominik BeerSimon S K LeeGirish Nitin NadkarniRenee JohnsonLaura AndreasenAnne ClaytonClive R PullingerZachary T YonedaDaniel J FriedmanMatthew C HymanRenae L JudyAllan C SkanesKate M OrlandPaloma JordaTimothy M TreuMatthew T OetjensRajesh SubbiahJacob Peter HartmannHeidi T MayJohn P KaneTariq Ziad IssaNavid A NafissiPeter Leong-SitMarie-Pierre DubéCarolina RoselliSeung Hoan Choinull nullJean Claude TardifHabib Rehman KhanStacey KnightJesper Hastrup SvendsenBruce WalkerRichard Karlsson LinnérJohn Michael GazianoRafik TadrosDiane FatkinDaniel James RaderSvati H ShahDan M RodenGregory M MarcusRuth J F LoosScott M DamrauerChristopher M HaggertyKelly ChoAarno PalotieMorten Salling OlesenLee L EckhardtJason D RobertsMichael J CutlerM Benjamin ShoemakerPeter W F WilsonPatrick T EllinorSteven A Lubitz
Published in: Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine (2024)
Our findings highlight gene regions associated with ion channel function (AVAP/AVRT), as well as cardiac development and the sarcomere (AVAP/AVRT and AVNRT) as important potential effectors of supraventricular tachycardia susceptibility.
Keyphrases
  • catheter ablation
  • genome wide association
  • case control
  • systematic review
  • genome wide
  • atrial fibrillation
  • copy number
  • meta analyses
  • left ventricular
  • congenital heart disease
  • human health
  • type iii
  • climate change