A study of the association between angiotensinogen (AGT) gene polymorphism (M235T) and preeclampsia in Thai pregnant women.

This study investigated the association between AGT M235T and preeclampsia in Thai pregnant women. A case-control study was conducted to compare the distributions of AGT M235T genotypes and alleles between 142 normotensive pregnancies as controls and 61 preeclampsia pregnancies as cases in a tertiary-care university hospital in Chiang Mai, Thailand. The results show that the distribution of AGT M235T genotypes (MM, MT and TT) of both groups were not significantly different (preeclampsia: 0.0, 16.4, 83.6%; control: 2.1, 22.5, 75.4%, respectively; pā€‰=ā€‰.30). Additionally, there was no statistical difference in the distribution of AGT M235T alleles (M and T alleles) (preeclampsia: 8.2 and 91.8% versus control: 13.4 and 86.6%, respectively; pā€‰=ā€‰.14). In this study, the distributions of AGT M235T were not different in both groups. Therefore, AGT M235T polymorphism may not play a significant role in preeclampsia pathophysiology in Thai population. Impact statement What is already known on this subject? Preeclampsia is one of the major complications during pregnancy; it significantly affects maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality. Effort has been made to find markers and predictors that are associated with the pathophysiology of preeclampsia. AGT M235T gene polymorphism may cause increased blood pressure in preeclampsia pregnancy; however, evidences are still controversial. What do the results of this study add? We conducted a case-control study to compare the distrib...
Source: Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology - Category: OBGYN Tags: J Obstet Gynaecol Source Type: research