1. The long-term evolution of young adults’ risk profiles for CVD
- Author
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Ulrich Laaser, Peter Allhoff, Gerhard Wambach, and Gerhard Bönner
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Cholesterol ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Diastole ,Risk profile ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Internal medicine ,Early adulthood ,Epidemiology ,medicine ,Risk factor ,Young adult ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Prospective epidemiological studies on the evolution of the cardiovascular risk-profile in young adulthood have not been published so far for Germany. In 1975 a sample of 5 924 adolescents aged 15–19 was examined at schools in the city of Cologne. After reexamination in 1976 und 1980, a long-term follow-up was carried out with those still living in the city and thus being easily available in 1990. For that purpose 613 former adolescents were identified and invited to the university hospital; 210 young adults (143 males (M) and 67 females (F)) now 30 – 34 years old were examined for main cardiovascular risk factors using the same methodology as in 1975. Whereas systolic and diastolic (phase 5) blood pressures (SBP and DBF) did not change very much, the means of total cholesterol (CHOL) and body-mass (BMI) increased considerably (CHOL from 158 mg/dl in 1975 to 195 in 1990 (M) and from 176 to 199 (F); BMI from 20.8 kg/sqm to 24.1 (M) and from 20.6 to 22.7 (F)). Pearson correlations increased especially between SBP and DBP (from .21 to .52 (M) and from .45 to .65 (F)) and between DBP and BMI (from .16 to .26 (M) and from .25 to .40 (F)). Autocorrelations remained quite high over the entire period (SBP .43, DBP .48, CHOL .42 and BMI.71 (M) and .51, .36, .49 and .81 (F)). Regression analysis shows that 51 % of the variance of SBP and of DBP in 1990 can be explained mainly by the foregoing measurements, but only 24 % of the variance of total cholesterol. Risk patterns in terms of aggregation of risk factors and risk habits worsened considerably during the 15 years of observation. Given the rarity of longitudinal risk factor observations in early adulthood, the Cologne data underline the considerable stability of cardiovascular risk factors also during this period of life and stress the importance of appropriate monitoring and intervention early in life.
- Published
- 1995
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