I heard environmental factors also are a factor for heart diseases - namely, air pollution.
People of South Asian descent don’t all live in the same place with the same climate. So that’s not the reason.
Statistically significant portion might be in just a handful of similar cities. There are big cities in sa.
My point is, the diaspora is spread enough that you can rule out climate and air quality by comparing cohorts within the same climate and same air quality. Most cities in Europe don’t have terrible air quality for example. Your suggestion that big Asian cities have more relevance in the result goes against how you actually do statistics.
I do love that the acronym is MASALA.
Genetic quirk is the only thing I can think of. But which gene marker specifically is glitching out here? I barely know anything about genetics, but I do remember that some genetic anomalies tied to heart formation in early fetal development also lead to throat and stomach problems too. Do those correspond, or is this isolated?
it is bcoz they r locate in s. asian
i hope this help
- professor 58008
Shut up, Prof.Dimwit.




