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1.
BACKGROUND: This study aims to examine cardiovascular risk factors in relation to all-cause mortality in elderly populations of different European countries. METHODS: Men aged 65--84 years from defined administrative areas were enrolled in Finland (rural areas of east and west Finland; n=716), in the Netherlands (the town of Zutphen; n=887), and in Italy (the rural areas of Crevalcore and Montegiorgio; n=682). Ten-year all-cause mortality was studied in relation to measurements taken at entry: age, systolic blood pressure, HDL- and non-HDL-cholesterol, body mass index, heart rate and smoking habits. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed with all-cause mortality as the end-point. RESULTS: Ten-year death rates from all causes were higher in Finland (574 per 1000), lower in the Netherlands (475 per 1000), and Italy (466 per 1000). Age, heart rate and smoking in all three countries were independently associated with 10-year all-cause mortality. Non-HDL-cholesterol was not related with all-cause mortality. The observed associations between HDL-cholesterol, systolic blood pressure, body mass index and all-cause mortality were dependent on the in- or exclusions of early death. CONCLUSION: In these elderly men only age, smoking habits and heart rate were consistently associated with all-cause mortality.  相似文献   

2.
OBJECTIVES:Ten-year coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality in elderly male cohorts in three European countries was evaluated as a function of silent resting Minnesota Code electrocardiographic (ECG) findings found at baseline. METHODS and RESULTS: Men aged 65-84 at entry were enrolled, examined and followed up for 10 years in 5 cohorts of three countries: Finland (N=716), the Netherlands (N= 887), and Italy (N = 682). Men with symptomatic angina pectoris, a documented history of myocardial infarction or heart failure were excluded from analysis, leaving 505 men in Finland, 713 in the Netherlands and 567 in Italy. ECG abnormalities were arranged in different groupings. Multivariate analyses adjusted ECG prediction of CHD mortality for cohort, and baseline age, systolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol, body mass index and cigarette smoking. RESULTS: Silent ECG abnormalities of presumed severity were found in more than half of these elderly men, with higher prevalence in Finland, compared to the other two countries. Adjusted hazards ratios for CHD deaths as a function of major single or combined ECG abnormalities, such as QQS and ST-T abnormalities, arrhythmia, definite and possible myocardial infarction and an operative definition of ischaemia, are generally similar across areas varying according to severity from around 1.5 to almost 4. Groupings of minor and major ECG abnormalities in the pooled countries gave significant relative risks of 1.79 and 3.12 respectively, compared to the group without or with marginal abnormalities. Sensitivity and positive predictive value were low, while specificity was high. CONCLUSIONS: Silent ECG abnormalities in elderly people are common and they carry a high risk of coronary death in the next 10 years, with relative risk ranging from around 1.5 to almost 4 or more depending upon severity and combination of findings.  相似文献   

3.
W S Aronow 《Geriatrics》1990,45(1):71-4, 79-80
Shown to be associated with new coronary events in elderly men and women are cigarette smoking, systolic or diastolic hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, low serum HDL cholesterol, increased ratio of serum total cholesterol to serum HDL cholesterol, hypertriglyceridemia, diabetes mellitus, obesity, physical inactivity, increased age, prior coronary artery disease, and electrocardiographic and echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy. The greater the number of major coronary risk factors, the higher the incidence of new coronary events. Risk factor modification should therefore be considered in elderly persons.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Depressive symptoms have been suggested to increase the risk of cardiovascular diseases, but this may reflect reversed causality. We investigated to what extent depressive symptoms are a true risk factor for cardiovascular mortality in elderly men. DESIGN: The Finland, Italy and Netherlands Elderly (FINE) study is a prospective cohort study conducted in Finland, Italy and The Netherlands. METHODS: Depressive symptoms were measured with the Zung self-rating Depression Scale in 799 elderly men, aged 70-90 years, free from cardiovascular diseases. Using Cox models, hazard ratios (HRs) were calculated for specific cardiovascular mortality endpoints. The analyses were adjusted for potential confounders, stratified on country and repeated after exclusion of men who died from cardiovascular diseases up to 5 years after baseline. RESULTS: During 10-years of follow-up 224 (28%) men died from cardiovascular diseases. The adjusted hazard for a five-point increase in depressive symptoms was 1.15 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.08-1.23] for cardiovascular mortality. This risk was stronger for mortality from stroke (HR 1.35; 95% CI 1.19-1.53) and heart failure (HR 1.16; 95% CI 1.00-1.35) in comparison with mortality from coronary heart disease (HR 1.08; 95% CI 0.97-1.20) and other degenerative heart diseases (HR 1.06; 95% CI 0.91-1.23). Exclusion of men who died from cardiovascular diseases within 5 years after baseline did not change the strength of the associations. There were no significant differences in HRs between northern and southern Europe. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides further and more convincing prospective evidence for depressive symptoms as a risk factor for cardiovascular mortality in elderly men.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Hypertension is a dominant characteristic in the prediction of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). We aimed to evaluate the association of blood pressure measurements with CVD mortality among different populations of the world. METHODS: A total of 12 763 men, aged 40 to 59 years, from 7 countries (United States, Japan, Italy, Greece, former Yugoslavia, Finland, and the Netherlands) were surveyed from 1958 to 1964. Follow-up for vital status and causes of death was carried out over 25 years. RESULTS: All baseline blood pressure measurements were the best predictors of CVD mortality, compared with age, physical activity, total serum cholesterol level, body mass index or height, and smoking. Moreover, pulse pressure and diastolic and systolic blood pressures were the best predictors for CVD death, followed by mean and mid blood pressures. The age-adjusted hazard ratio per 10-mm Hg increase in pulse pressure varied among cohorts from 1.19 in the United States (P = .04) to 1.29 in southern Europe (P = .01). Differences among cohorts were not significant. In the pooled cohorts, pulse pressure measurements were also a significant predictor for coronary heart disease (hazard ratio per 10-mm Hg increase, 1.15; P = .04) as well as stroke death (hazard ratio per 10-mm Hg increase, 1.32; P = .01). CONCLUSIONS: Pulse pressure followed by diastolic and systolic blood pressures were the best predictors for CVD mortality among other blood pressures, as well as age, physical activity, total serum cholesterol level, anthropometric indexes, and smoking habits. No significant differences were observed among the different populations studied.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the risk of death from coronary heart disease, stroke, all cardiovascular diseases and all-cause mortality associated with pulse pressure among the middle-aged population. METHODS AND DESIGN: A prospective 15-year follow-up cohort study was conducted of two independent cross-sectional random samples of the population who participated in baseline surveys in 1972 or 1977. Each survey included a self-administered questionnaire with questions on smoking and antihypertensive drug treatment, measurements of height, weight and blood pressure and the determination of the serum cholesterol concentration. Multivariate analyses were performed by using Cox proportional hazard models. SETTING: The provinces of North Karelia and Kuopio in eastern Finland PARTICIPANTS: Men and women aged 45-64 years with no history of myocardial infarction or stroke at the time of the baseline survey were selected. In total 4333 men and 5270 women took part in this follow-up study. RESULTS: The relative risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality increased with the increasing pulse pressure in individuals aged 45-64 years independent of the diastolic blood pressure level. Only in women with diastolic blood pressure > or = 95 mmHg was the relative risk of fatal stroke not statistically significant. After adjustment for systolic blood pressure, the positive association between mortality and increasing pulse pressure disappeared. CONCLUSION: Increasing pulse pressure is a predictor of death from coronary heart disease, stroke, cardiovascular disease and all causes in men and women aged 45-64 years, but the increase in risk is entirely associated with the increase in systolic blood pressure.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND:-Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a common risk factor for cardiovascular mortality. Causes other than hypertension have not previously been investigated longitudinally. The aim of the present study was to determine hemodynamic, metabolic, and psychosocial predictors at 50 years of age for the prevalence of echocardiographic LVH and geometric subtypes at age 70 by use of a large sample of men from the general population followed up for 20 years. Methods and Results-In 1970 to 1973, all men born from 1920 to 1924 and residing in Uppsala County, Sweden, were invited to participate in a health survey aimed at identifying risk factors for cardiovascular disease. At a reinvestigation 20 years later, echocardiographic left ventricular mass index was determined in 475 subjects. A 1-SD increase in body mass index, systolic or diastolic blood pressure, fasting LDL/HDL cholesterol, serum triglycerides, or the serum cholesterol ester proportion of several saturated fatty acids or oleic acid at age 50 significantly increased the odds of having LVH at age 70 by 27% to 41%, whereas an increase in linoleic acid proportion was protective. Almost all metabolic predictors were independent of ischemic heart disease, valvular disease, and use of antihypertensive medication at age 70. CONCLUSIONS:-Dyslipidemia and indices of a low dietary intake of linoleic acid and high intake of saturated and monounsaturated fats, as well as hypertension and obesity, at age 50 predicted the prevalence of LVH 20 years later in this prospective longitudinal cohort study, thereby suggesting that lipids may be important in the origin of LVH.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND: Elevated blood pressure is an established risk factor of cardiovascular diseases, but there is a constant debate whether the association is continuous or with a threshold. METHODS: During the 1960s (1964 onwards), 3,267 initially healthy male business executives (born 1919-1934) participated in voluntary health check-ups with measurements of cardiovascular disease risk factors. At baseline none of the men were on antihypertensive medication. Mortality follow-up was performed using national registers up to 31 December, 1995. Follow-up total and cardiovascular mortality was related to systolic (by 10 mmHg) and diastolic (by 5 mmHg, Korotkoff's 4th phase) blood pressure at baseline. Analyses were adjusted for age, body mass index, smoking and serum cholesterol. RESULTS: During an up to 32-year follow-up, there were 701 deaths, 234 (33.4%) of them due to coronary heart disease, 49 (7.0%) to stroke, 42 (6.0%) to other cardiovascular diseases and 204 (29.1%) to cancer. Total mortality curves of the whole cohort (all age groups) were flat until 131-140 mmHg (systolic) and 81-85 (diastolic) and increased thereafter. Among men who smoked and had baseline serum cholesterol > 6.5 mmol/l (n = 986), the risk of death increased progressively with systolic blood pressure, whereas among non-smoking normocholesterolaemic men (n = 504) the association was J-shaped, i.e. higher mortality at < or = 110 mmHg than between 111-150 mmHg and a more consistent rise from 151-160 mmHg. The curves were essentially similar for cardiovascular mortality. The results were supported by analyses where major cardiovascular risk factors were controlled. CONCLUSION: During a truly long-term follow-up, the relationship between systolic blood pressure and mortality was initially flat up to 131-140 mmHg although a linear relationship is suggested in men with other cardiovascular risk factors.  相似文献   

9.

Background and aims

Metabolic syndrome (MS) has recently been claimed to be an important new risk factor for the occurrence of coronary heart disease (CHD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) events, although it is simply a combination of known risk factors used in a dichotomized fashion. The aims of this analysis were to explore the predictive role of MS for CHD and CVD events in a population study, in comparison with using the same factors in a continuous fashion, with special emphasis on HDL cholesterol.

Methods and results

In the second examination of the Gubbio population study from central Italy, 2650 cardiovascular disease-free men and women, aged 35-74 years around 1990, were examined and followed-up for 12 years. The classic risk factors (sex, age, systolic blood pressure, serum cholesterol and smoking habits) were studied as predictors of CHD and CVD events, alone and with the contribution of other factors (HDL cholesterol, blood glucose, serum triglycerides and waist circumference) included in the so-called MS, based on several multivariate models. MS was also tested after adjustment for other risk factors.MS produced a predictive significant relative risk of 1.67 for CHD events and 1.82 for CVD events, but considering its single risk factors, the only ones contributing to prediction were HDL cholesterol and systolic blood pressure. Dedicated analyses showed that MS does not add anything to the power of prediction beyond the role of the single risk factors treated in a continuous fashion, while the best predictive power is obtained using classic risk factors (sex, age, smoking habits, total cholesterol, systolic blood pressure) with the addition of HDL cholesterol.

Conclusions

The predictive power of MS is bound only to the presence of HDL cholesterol and blood pressure and does not add anything to using the same risk factor treated in a continuous fashion.  相似文献   

10.
Non-high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (total cholesterol [TC] minus HDL cholesterol) has been suggested as the preferred lipid fraction to predict cardiovascular disease. We compared the ability of lipids, lipoproteins, the ratio of total to HDL cholesterol (TC/HDL), and non-HDL cholesterol to predict fatal coronary heart disease (CHD) and cardiovascular disease in 1,386 women and 1,094 men (mean age 69 years). After 10 years, there were more deaths in men (n = 310) than women (n = 268), but the proportions of deaths attributed to CHD (23% and 25%, respectively) and cardiovascular disease (48% and 47%) were similar. In men, age-adjusted values for non-HDL cholesterol, TC/HDL ratio, and triglycerides each predicted a significantly increased risk of CHD and cardiovascular disease; none of these associations was independent of pack-years of smoking, systolic blood pressure, fasting plasma glucose, body mass index, and physical activity. In women, age-adjusted non-HDL cholesterol levels did not predict CHD or cardiovascular disease events before or after adjusting for these covariates and for estrogen replacement therapy. In women, only the ratio of TC to HDL cholesterol predicted CHD and cardiovascular disease deaths independent of estrogen use and other risk factors. Observed associations were sensitive to time, being evident in women at 3 and 5 years, and lost thereafter, but not apparent before 10 years in men. Thus, non-HDL cholesterol is not superior to individual lipids, lipoproteins, or their ratios in the prediction of cardiovascular death in older adults.  相似文献   

11.
CHD: a major burden in type 2 diabetes   总被引:6,自引:1,他引:5  
Patients with type 2 diabetes have a two- to four-fold greater risk of cardiovascular mortality than non-diabetic individuals. In order to prevent coronary events in the diabetic population, it is important to treat modifiable cardiovascular risk factors. Data from the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT) show that serum cholesterol level, systolic blood pressure level and cigarette smoking were significant predictors of cardiovascular disease mortality in men with and without diabetes. At every risk factor level, the absolute risk of age-adjusted coronary death rate was three times greater for diabetic men than non-diabetic men (p<0.0001). Patients with diabetes have an abnormal (dyslipidaemic) lipoprotein profile with high levels of very low density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides, and a low level of high density lipoprotein cholesterol. Although levels of total cholesterol or low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol do not differ significantly between patients with and without diabetes, those with diabetes have higher levels of atherogenic small dense LDL particles. MRFIT data show that at any serum cholesterol level, diabetes confers two-three times the risk for a coronary event. These findings constitute the rationale for considering hypolipaemic therapy, e.g. with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins), in diabetic patients with dyslipidaemia, particularly in those with evidence of coronary heart disease. Evidence shows that statins significantly lower cholesterol, exhibit beneficial effects on many components of atherosclerosis, and can significantly reduce the incidence of stroke.  相似文献   

12.
《Global Heart》2016,11(2):207-212
In the 1960s and early 1970s, coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality in Finland was the highest in the world, and within Finland, mortality was particularly high in the eastern part of the country. The North Karelia Project, the first large community-based cardiovascular diseases prevention program was established in 1972 to reduce the extremely high CHD mortality through behavioral change and reduction of the main cardiovascular disease risk factors among the whole population of North Karelia, the easternmost province of Finland. During the 40-year period from 1972 to 2012, smoking prevalence, serum total cholesterol, and systolic blood pressure declined markedly, except a small increase in serum cholesterol levels between 2007 and 2012. From the early 1970s to 2012, CHD mortality decreased by 82% (from 643 to 118 per 100,000) among working-age (35 to 64 years) men. Among working-age women, the decline was 84% (from 114 to 17 per 100,000). During the first 10 years, changes in these 3 target risk factors explained nearly all of the observed mortality reduction. Since the mid-1980s, the observed reduction in mortality has been larger than the predicted reduction. In the early 1970s, premature CHD mortality (35 to 74 years) was about 37% higher among Eastern Finnish men and 23% higher among Eastern Finnish women, compared with men and women in Southwestern Finland. During the last 40 years, premature CHD mortality declined markedly in both areas, but the decline was larger in Eastern Finland and the mortality gap between the two areas nearly disappeared.  相似文献   

13.
The Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial was a large collaborative primary prevention trial designed to test the effects of lowering cardiovascular risk factors (ie, diastolic blood pressure [DBP], serum cholesterol, and cigarette smoking) on mortality rate from coronary heart disease in 12,866 high-risk men aged 35 to 57 years. Men were randomly assigned to either special intervention (SI) or usual care (UC) groups. Usual care men were referred to their regular source of medical care. Special intervention men were seen frequently and underwent intensive intervention initially followed by maintenance intervention in 22 different clinical centers. Hypertension intervention in SI men primarily consisted of a stepped-care pharmacologic approach designed to lower blood pressure (BP). After six years, 58.2% of SI men and 47.0% of UC men were given antihypertensive medication. In both study groups, mean systolic and diastolic BPs decreased from baseline; after six years, overall DBP was 3.2 mm Hg lower in SI men compared with UC men. In hypertensive men (DBP greater than or equal to 90 mm Hg or those taking antihypertensive medication at baseline), after six years, DBP was 4.4 mm Hg lower in the SI group compared with the UC group. Use of specific antihypertensive agents differed substantially between the two groups. Self-reported complaints while taking antihypertensive drugs were minimal in both groups. Weight loss was associated with BP lowering in both study groups, regardless of treatment status.  相似文献   

14.
OBJECTIVE—A systematic reanalysis of 10 year coronary heart disease incidence data from the northern and the southern European cohorts of the seven countries study, to contribute indirectly to the production of a European coronary risk chart.
DESIGN AND SETTING—Men aged 40-59 years at entry were studied in three northern European cohorts based in Finland and Netherlands (n = 2213); and in 10 southern European cohorts based in Italy, former Yugoslavia, and Greece (n = 5897). Multiple logistic models for the prediction of coronary deaths, coronary incidence (hard criteria), and coronary incidence (any criterion) were solved for the two geographical groups and their pool. Risk factors fed into the models were age, systolic blood pressure, serum total cholesterol, and cigarette smoking.
RESULTS—10 year coronary heart disease mortality and incidence were higher in northern than in southern Europe, with ratios around 2.65. Ratios among the three coronary heart disease manifestations were identical in the two cultural groupings. Coefficients of the multiple logistic models were similar and not significantly different between the two groupings. When applying the coefficients back to the same or the opposite population, the relative risk was large and similar in the different cultures. Relative risk was larger for more severe coronary heart disease manifestations. The absolute risk was overestimated when applying the northern European model to southern European populations and vice versa, with ratios of about 1.5 and 0.5, respectively. Coronary risk charts created to reproduce the shape of those incorporated in recent European guidelines confirmed the excess of absolute risk in the northern compared with the southern European cohorts, all else being equal.
CONCLUSIONS—In theory, a more appropriate European coronary risk chart could be produced by adopting coefficients to correct for different background incidence rates in different cultures. Other coefficients could appropriately be used to transform mortality risk into incidence risk.


Keywords: coronary heart disease; risk factors; risk estimate  相似文献   

15.
From 1977 to 1982 screening for cardiovascular disease was performed in three Norwegian counties. All those aged between 40 and 54 years were invited, of whom 23,690 men and 23,425 women (90%) attended. Smoking habits and previous cardiovascular disease were recorded; total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL cholesterol), triglycerides and blood pressure were measured. During subsequent follow-up (mean 6.8 years) 422 men and 54 women died from coronary heart disease, 514 and 114 from all cardiovascular diseases and 983 and 404 from all causes, men and women respectively. For men, mortality decreased with increasing HDL cholesterol, to a minimum of around 1.5 mmol.l-1 (58 mg.dl-1), whereafter mortality increased. This applies to coronary, cardiovascular and all causes of death, as well as to men with and without a history of disease. The association between mortality and HDL cholesterol in healthy men disappeared when total cholesterol was below 6.5 mmol.l-1 (251 mg.dl-1). The inverse association between mortality and HDL cholesterol in women was somewhat stronger than in men, both for coronary and cardiovascular diseases. The relative risks of coronary death, associated with an increase in HDL cholesterol of 0.5 mmol.l-1 (19 mg.dl-1), from the Cox proportional hazards regression, with other major cardiovascular risk factors as covariates, were 0.8 (95% confidence interval: 0.6, 1.0) and 0.8 (0.7, 1.0) for men with and without history of disease, respectively. Corresponding figures for women were 0.5 (0.3, 0.9) and 0.7 (0.4, 1.3).  相似文献   

16.
Is hypertension more benign when associated with obesity?   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To determine the effect of obesity on prognosis in hypertensive subjects, a population of 1727 men 50 to 79 years of age was dichotomized by baseline body mass index (less than 27 and greater than or equal to 27 kg/m2) and systolic blood pressure (less than 160 and greater than or equal to 160 mm Hg). After 9 years of follow-up, age-adjusted all-cause, cardiovascular, and ischemic heart disease mortality rates were highest in the nonobese hypertensive subjects. The relative risk for mortality associated with a systolic blood pressure of 160 mm Hg or higher was significantly increased only in the nonobese group, with the largest difference in relative risk between obese and nonobese for ischemic heart disease. Results were consistent after separately excluding those with a history of heart disease, diabetes, current use of antihypertensive medication, and cigarette smoking, and those who died within 2 years of the baseline examination. When the independent effect of risk factors, including age, plasma cholesterol level, cigarette smoking, use of antihypertensive medication, and personal history of heart disease or diabetes was assessed with the Cox model, systolic blood pressure was a significant independent predictor of all-cause, cardiovascular, and ischemic heart disease death only in the nonobese subjects. We do not exclude an adverse effect of raised blood pressure in the obese. However, these data suggest that the prognosis is poorer in leaner hypertensive patients than in those who are overweight.  相似文献   

17.
Traditional coronary risk factors in African Americans   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The importance of traditional coronary artery disease risk factors in the development of coronary heart disease is well known. African Americans have a higher prevalence of such risk factors as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity, cigarette smoking, and left ventricular hypertrophy, which might account for the disproportionate rate of coronary heart disease mortality in African Americans. Compelling data from randomized lipid-lowering trials show conclusively that lowering cholesterol levels, specifically low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, lowers coronary heart disease morbidity and mortality. Recent data has also demonstrated the beneficial effects of lowering blood pressure on cardiovascular mortality. Left ventricular hypertrophy, which results from elevated blood pressure, seems to raise coronary heart disease risks independently. Diabetes mellitus, cigarette use, physical inactivity, stress, and obesity play critical roles collectively and individually in increasing coronary heart disease, morbidity, and mortality. Clustering of coronary heart disease risk factors in African Americans must be strongly considered to play a critical role in the excess mortality from coronary heart disease seen in African Americans. New innovative approaches are required if the course of coronary heart disease is to be altered.  相似文献   

18.
Background and aimsBoth blood pressure and C-reactive protein (CRP) are individually associated with cardiovascular mortality risk. However, the combined effect of systolic blood pressure (SBP) and CRP on coronary heart disease (CHD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality risk, has not been studied.Methods and resultsWe evaluated the joint impact of SBP and CRP and the risk of mortality in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease prospective cohort study of 1622 men aged 42–61 years at recruitment with no history of CVD. SBP and CRP were measured. SBP was categorized as low and high (cut-off 135 mmHg) and CRP as low and high (cut-off 1.54 mg/L) based on ROC curves. Multivariable adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) with confidence intervals (CI) were calculated.During a median follow-up of 28 years, 196 cases of CHD and 320 cases of CVD deaths occurred. Elevated SBP (>135 mmHg) combined with elevated (CRP >1.54 mg/L) were associated with CHD and CVD mortality (HR 3.41, 95% CI, 2.20–5.28, p < 0.001) and (HR 2.93, 95% CI, 2.11–4.06, p < 0.001) respectively after adjustment for age, examination year, smoking, alcohol consumption, BMI, Type 2 diabetes, energy expenditure, total cholesterol, serum HDL cholesterol, antihypertensive medication and use of aspirin.ConclusionThe combined effect of both high systolic blood pressure and high CRP is associated with increased risk of future CHD and CVD mortality as compared with both low SBP and low CRP levels in general male Caucasian population.  相似文献   

19.
AIMS: To evaluate the combined effects of the two most frequent modifiable risk factors, systolic blood pressure and serum cholesterol, on cardiovascular and coronary mortality, in a large French population aged 18 to 55 years. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied 108,879 men (mean age 39.1+/-9.4 years) and 84,931 women (mean age 37.3+/-10.0 years) who had a health check-up at the IPC Center between 1978 and 1988. Mortality data for a mean period of 13 years were analysed. Systolic blood pressure and cholesterol levels were classified according to the cut-points proposed by international guidelines. In men, the prevalence of high cholesterol was more than twice as high in hypertensives as in normotensives; in women, it was more than three times higher. The combination of these two risk factors has additive effects on cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease risk. In men, a borderline elevation of both systolic blood pressure (130-139 mmHg) and cholesterol (200-239 mg x dl(-1)) leads to a three- to four-fold increase in cardiovascular disease risk. Men with systolic blood pressure >or=160 mmHg represent a small percentage (about 5%) who have a 10-fold increase in cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease risk, especially when high cholesterol is present. In women of the same age, similar trends were observed, but the results were less significant, probably due to the low cardiovascular disease mortality rates. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, in French subjects under 55 years of age, a combination of high systolic blood pressure and high serum cholesterol dramatically increased cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease risk, especially in men. A more aggressive public health policy is needed to prevent the development of risk factors in younger subjects.  相似文献   

20.
ABSTRACT. The prevalence of symptoms of intermittent claudication and their association with 5-year mortality were examined in a population study in Finland. A number of 5738 men and 5224 women, aged 30–59 years, from 4 geographic areas of the country were studied. According to a structured interview, 2.1% of the men and 1.8% of the women reported typical symptoms of intermittent claudication. Claudication was most prevalent in East Finland and among persons with agricultural occupations. The symptoms were more frequent in diabetics and persons with symptoms and signs of coronary heart disease (CHD) than in persons without these diseases. High serum cholesterol and smoking were associated with these symptoms but high blood pressure was not. The risk of death from cardiovascular causes was nearly 3-fold in men with claudication compared to men without claudication. Symptoms of chest pain and smoking increased significantly the mortality risk of male claudicants. The validity of symptoms was poorer in women than in men and they were also less reliable predictors of death in women. A small part of the effect of claudication on mortality was due to its association with conventional CHD risk factors. However, after adjusting for symptoms and signs of CHD, claudication had no independent effect on mortality in men.  相似文献   

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