Short people are at a greater risk of heart attack - and there's little they can do about it because the link is genetic.
For 60 years scientists had noted a correlation between height and coronary heart disease, which kills 73,000 people a year in the UK.
It was thought that social factors that can stunt height, such as poor nutrition in childhood, might explain why petite people were more likely to develop heart problems.
But a new study has found that every 2.5 inches difference in height between two people makes the shorter person 13.5 per cent more likely to develop heart disease.
Researchers at the University of Leicester studied the DNA of people of various heights; some had suffered heart disease and some had not. They found that the same genetic variants that help determine a person's adult height also influence the development of their cardiovascular system.