10 results on '"Cesana GC"'
Search Results
2. The relation of body mass index and abdominal adiposity with dyslipidemia in 27 general populations of the WHO MONICA Project
- Author
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Hobbs, MST, Jamrozik, K., Thompson, PL, Armstrong, BK, de Backer, G, De Craene, I, Van Onsem, P, Van Parys, L., De Henauw, S, De Bacquer, D, Kornitzer, M, Berghmans, L., Bara, L, de Smet, P, Jeanjean, M, Brohet, C, Kulbertus, HE, Degre, S, Lavenne, F, Jansens, D, Lefebvre, F., Beck, D, Wunsch, G., Bertrand, F., van Houte, M., Rime, B., Rorive, G, Hannot, R., Adrienne, A, Luyckx, A, Wolf, HK, Gregor, RD, Bata, IR, Brownell, B., Webber, K, Skodova´, Z, Pisa, Z., Berka, L., Cicha, Z., Cerovska´, J, Emrova´, R, Hoke, M, Hronkova, M., Pikhartova´, J., Grafnetter, D., Poledne, R., Vojtisek, P., Vorlicek, J., Wiesner, E, Schroll, M, Kirchhoff, M, Sjøl, A., Quitsau Lund, S, Tuomilehto, J, Puska, P., Vartiainen, E., Korhonen, H., Jousilahti, M, Ducimetie`re, P, Richard, JL, Bingham, A., Lang, T, Amouyel, P, Cottel, D., Nuttens, MC, Marecaux, N., Dallongeville, J., Salomez, J. L., Montaye, M., Steclebout, C, Arveiler, D, Schaffer, P, Haas, V, Wagner, A, Lamamy, N., Savouret, M, Houset, M., Pierau, F., Goetz, V, Ferrie`res, J, Ruidavets, JB, Cambou, JP, Rodier, P., Saulet, C, Greiser, E., Herman, B., Stu¨demann, G, Nu¨ssel, E., Osto¨r Lamm, E., Scheidt, R., Morgenstern, W., Stadler, M, Ganova, M, Keil, U, Tietze, M., Banos, R., Do¨ring, A., Filipiak, B, Barth, W, Heinemann, L, Muche, J., Schmalfuss, S., Assmann, A., Bo¨thig, S., Voigt, G., Brasche, S., Quietzsch, D., Classen, E, Sigfu´sson, N, Gudmundsdo´ttir, II, Stefa´nsdo´ttir, I, Thorsteinsson, T., Sigvaldason H, Menotti, A, Giampaoli, S., Verdecchia, A, Righetti, G., De Pasquale, B., Di Raimo, P, Forte, E., Majetta, A, Vanuzzo, D, Feruglio, GA, Pilotto, L., Cignacco, G., Marini, R., Zilio, G, Cesana, GC, Ferrario, M, Sega, R., Mocarelli, P, BRAMBILLA, PAOLO, Bluzhas, J, Domarkiene, S., Tamosiunas, A., Reklaitiene, R, Beaglehole, R, Jackson, R, Bonita, R, Stewart, A., Mahon, V, Bingley, W, Pajak, A, Sznajd, J, Kawalec, E., Pazucha, T., Malczewska, M., Mo´rawska, I, Rywik, SL, Broda,V, Polakowska, M., Kurjata, P, Varlamova, A, Britov, A., Konstantinov, V, Timofeeva, V, Alexandri, V, Konstantinova, O, Nikitin, Y.u. P, Malyutina, S., Gafarov, V, Feigin, V, Sans, S., Balaguer Vintro´, V, Balana`, V, Gonzalez, V, Gomez, V, Borras, V, Rode´s, A, Wilhelmsen, L, Harmsen, P., Rosengren, A., Lappas, G, Asplund, K., Huhtasaari, F., Stegmayr, B., Lundberg V, Gutzwiller, F, Paccaud, F., Rickenbach, M., Wietlisbach, V., Barazzoni, F, Mainieri, F., Tullen, B, Evans, V, McCrum, EE, Falconer, T, Cashman, S., Patterson, C., Kerr, M., O’Reilly, D., Scott, A., McConville, M., McMillan, I., McMaster, D, Tunstall Pedoe, H., Smith, WCS, Tavendale, R., Crombie, V, Barrett, K., Brown, C., Shewry, M., Hannh, M. K, Morrisson, C, Planojevic, M, Jakovljevic, D., Svircevic, A., Mirilov, V., Strasser, V., Mendis, S., Martin8, I, Gyarfas8, V, Pı´_sa8, V, Dodu8, S. R. A., Bo¨thig8, S., Watson, M. J., Hill, M., Price, A, Kuulasmaa, K., Tuomilehto, J., Ruokokoski, E, Rajakangas, A. M., Ma¨kinen, M., Virman Ojanen, T, Palonen, L., Akkila, J, Cepaitis, Z., Molarius, A., Moltchanov, V., Tolonen, H, Grafnetter, D, Dobson, A., Fortmann, SP, Shatchkute, A, Zaitsev, V, Epstein, FH, Feinleib, M, Karvonen, MJ, Prineas, RJ, Williams, OD, Hobbs, M, Jamrozik, K, Thompson, P, Armstrong, B, de Backer, G, De Craene, I, Van Onsem, P, Van Parys, L, De Henauw, S, De Bacquer, D, Kornitzer, M, Berghmans, L, Bara, L, de Smet, P, Jeanjean, M, Brohet, C, Kulbertus, H, Degre, S, Lavenne, F, Jansens, D, Lefebvre, F, Beck, D, Wunsch, G, Bertrand, F, van Houte, M, Rime, B, Rorive, G, Hannot, R, Adrienne, A, Luyckx, A, Wolf, H, Gregor, R, Bata, I, Brownell, B, Webber, K, Skodova´, Z, Pisa, Z, Berka, L, Cicha, Z, Cerovska´, J, Emrova´, R, Hoke, M, Hronkova, M, Pikhartova´, J, Grafnetter, D, Poledne, R, Vojtisek, P, Vorlicek, J, Wiesner, E, Schroll, M, Kirchhoff, M, Sjøl, A, Quitsau Lund, S, Tuomilehto, J, Puska, P, Vartiainen, E, Korhonen, H, Jousilahti, M, Ducimetie`re, P, Richard, J, Bingham, A, Lang, T, Amouyel, P, Cottel, D, Nuttens, M, Marecaux, N, Dallongeville, J, Salomez, J, Montaye, M, Steclebout, C, Arveiler, D, Schaffer, P, Haas, V, Wagner, A, Lamamy, N, Savouret, M, Houset, M, Pierau, F, Goetz, V, Ferrie`res, J, Ruidavets, J, Cambou, J, Rodier, P, Saulet, C, Greiser, E, Herman, B, Stu¨demann, G, Nu¨ssel, E, Osto¨r Lamm, E, Scheidt, R, Morgenstern, W, Stadler, M, Ganova, M, Keil, U, Tietze, M, Banos, R, Do¨ring, A, Filipiak, B, Barth, W, Heinemann, L, Muche, J, Schmalfuss, S, Assmann, A, Bo¨thig, S, Voigt, G, Brasche, S, Quietzsch, D, Classen, E, Sigfu´sson, N, Gudmundsdo´ttir, I, Stefa´nsdo´ttir, I, Thorsteinsson, T, Sigvaldason, H, Menotti, A, Giampaoli, S, Verdecchia, A, Righetti, G, De Pasquale, B, Di Raimo, P, Forte, E, Majetta, A, Vanuzzo, D, Feruglio, G, Pilotto, L, Cignacco, G, Marini, R, Zilio, G, Cesana, G, Ferrario, M, Sega, R, Mocarelli, P, Brambilla, P, Bluzhas, J, Domarkiene, S, Tamosiunas, A, Reklaitiene, R, Beaglehole, R, Jackson, R, Bonita, R, Stewart, A, Mahon, V, Bingley, W, Pajak, A, Sznajd, J, Kawalec, E, Pazucha, T, Malczewska, M, Mo´rawska, I, Rywik, S, Broda, V, Polakowska, M, Kurjata, P, Varlamova, A, Britov, A, Konstantinov, V, Timofeeva, V, Alexandri, V, Konstantinova, O, Nikitin, Y, Malyutina, S, Gafarov, V, Feigin, V, Sans, S, Balaguer Vintro´, V, Balana`, V, Gonzalez, V, Gomez, V, Borras, V, Rode´s, A, Wilhelmsen, L, Harmsen, P, Rosengren, A, Lappas, G, Asplund, K, Huhtasaari, F, Stegmayr, B, Lundberg, V, Gutzwiller, F, Paccaud, F, Rickenbach, M, Wietlisbach, V, Barazzoni, F, Mainieri, F, Tullen, B, Evans, V, Mccrum, E, Falconer, T, Cashman, S, Patterson, C, Kerr, M, O’Reilly, D, Scott, A, Mcconville, M, Mcmillan, I, Mcmaster, D, Tunstall Pedoe, H, Smith, W, Tavendale, R, Crombie, V, Barrett, K, Brown, C, Shewry, M, Hannh, M, Morrisson, C, Planojevic, M, Jakovljevic, D, Svircevic, A, Mirilov, V, Strasser, V, Mendis, S, Martin8, I, Gyarfas8, V, Pı´_sa8, V, Dodu8, S, Bo¨thig8, S, Watson, M, Hill, M, Price, A, Kuulasmaa, K, Ruokokoski, E, Rajakangas, A, Ma¨kinen, M, Virman Ojanen, T, Palonen, L, Akkila, J, Cepaitis, Z, Molarius, A, Moltchanov, V, Tolonen, H, Dobson, A, Fortmann, S, Shatchkute, A, Zaitsev, V, Epstein, F, Feinleib, M, Karvonen, M, Prineas, R, and Williams, O
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Canada ,medicine.medical_specialty ,BIO/12 - BIOCHIMICA CLINICA E BIOLOGIA MOLECOLARE CLINICA ,Waist ,Cross-sectional study ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Logistic regression ,Body Mass Index ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Humans ,Triglycerides ,Abdominal obesity ,Adiposity ,Dyslipidemias ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Cholesterol, HDL ,Smoking ,Australia ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Cholesterol, LDL ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Health Surveys ,Europe ,Menopause ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Endocrinology ,Dyslipidemia ,Quartile ,Obesity, Abdominal ,Female ,Waist Circumference ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Body mass index ,New Zealand ,Demography - Abstract
Background and aims: The association between adiposity measures and dyslipidemia has seldom been assessed in a multipopulational setting. Methods and results: 27 populations from Europe, Australia, New Zealand and Canada (WHO MONICA project) using health surveys conducted between 1990 and 1997 in adults aged 35-64 years (n = 40,480). Dyslipidemia was defined as the total/HDL cholesterol ratio >6 (men) and >5 (women).Overall prevalence of dyslipidemia was 25% in men and 23% in women. Logistic regression showed that dyslipidemia was strongly associated with body mass index (BMI) in men and with waist circumference (WC) in women, after adjusting for region, age and smoking. Among normal-weight men and women (BMI84.8 cm) in normal-weight men, menopause in women and regular smoking further defined subgroups at increased risk. Conclusion: standard categories of BMI and WC, or their combinations, do not lead to optimal risk stratification for dyslipidemia in middle-age adults. Sex-specific adaptations are necessary, in particular by taking into account abdominal obesity in normal-weight men, post-menopausal age in women and regular smoking in both sexes
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- 2013
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3. Epidemiology and clinical course of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in Northern Italy, in 2005–2010
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Susanna Conti, S Harari, A Caminati, Fabiana Madotto, and Cesana Gc
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Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis ,Pathology ,business.industry ,Epidemiology ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine ,Clinical course ,medicine.disease ,business ,Northern italy - Published
- 2015
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4. Use of implantable cardioverter defibrillator therapy in Lombardy from 2005 to 2010
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Chiodini, Susanna Conti, Fabiana Madotto, Carla Fornari, Cesana Gc, Lorenzo G. Mantovani, Madotto, F, Fornari, C, Chiodini, V, Mantovani, L, Conti, S, and Cesana, G
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medicine.medical_treatment ,ICD ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine ,Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator - Published
- 2015
5. Temporal Trends in Ischemic and Hemorrhagic Strokes in Northern Italy: Results from the Cardiovascular Monitoring Unit in Northern Italy Population. Based Register, 1998-2004
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Lorenza Bertù, Giorgio Bono, Giovanni Veronesi, Matteo Bonzini, L.E. Chambless, Simone Vidale, Cesana Gc, and Marco M Ferrario
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Time Factors ,Epidemiology ,Attack rate ,Population ,Comorbidity ,Brain Ischemia ,Sex Factors ,Risk Factors ,Case fatality rate ,Medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Mortality ,education ,Stroke ,Aged ,Dyslipidemias ,Retrospective Studies ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Mortality rate ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Italy ,Hypertension ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Intracranial Hemorrhages - Abstract
Background: We compared rates and case fatality from a population-based stroke register in Northern Italy between 1998 and 2004 to assess changes over time and to evaluate changes in case diagnosis and management. Methods: The WHO Multinational Monitoring of Trends and Determinants in Cardiovascular Disease criteria were used to identify suspected fatal or nonfatal events occurring among residents 35–74 years of age. Data on in-hospital treatments, symptoms and diagnostic tools were extracted. Out-of-hospital deaths were also investigated. The annual average relative change (ARC) in death rate, attack rate and case fatality were derived from Poisson models. Results: Death rates due to ischemic stroke (IS) decreased [men: ARC –12.7, 95% confidence interval (CI) –21.3 to –3.2; women: ARC –14.0, 95% CI –23.3 to –3.5]. These reductions are attributable to decreases in case fatality; attack rates of nonfatal IS increased (men: ARC 3.6, 95% CI 0.5–6.7; women: ARC 4.1, 95% CI 0.0–8.2). IS patients showed a higher prevalence of dyslipidemia and hypertension and underwent MRI more frequently in 2004. Both findings may explain the increased proportions of less severe cases. Case fatality and attack rates for hemorrhagic strokes (HS) were stable, with an observed increased prevalence of patients under anticoagulant/antiplatelet treatments. Conclusions: In this low-IS-incidence population, death rates decreased substantially during the investigated period. More accurate diagnostic tools increase the probability of detecting less severe cases. HS remains a frequently fatal disease with a stable incidence.
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- 2012
6. Emergency system prospective performance evaluation for cardiac arrest in Lombardia, an Italian region
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M. Bosio, M Landriscina, Antonio Pesenti, Giuseppe Citerio, Cesana Gc, Gianpaolo Rossi, Marta Raimondi, and Davide Emilio Galli
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Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Emergency Medical Services ,Psychological intervention ,Emergency Nursing ,Outcome Assessment, Health Care ,medicine ,Quality monitoring ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Aged ,Quality of Health Care ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Emergency Medical Service Communication Systems ,Mortality reduction ,Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation ,Phone call ,Heart Arrest ,Medical services ,Survival Rate ,Italy ,Emergency medicine ,Cohort ,Emergency Medicine ,Observational study ,Female ,Performance indicator ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
The aim of this research is to evaluate quality of out-of-hospital medical services in our country, using performance indicators and a new computerised database.(a)Data were collected prospectively in three emergency dispatch centres for 90 days. Follow-up was evaluated at 1 day and 1 month after the event. This paper presents data on the cardiac arrest cohort only. (b)Three emergency dispatch centres in Lombardia. (c)One hundred and seventy-eight patients in non-traumatic cardiac arrest were enrolled. (d)None. The study was observational only.Mean interval between phone call and arrival on scene was 8.5+/-3.5 min. BLS manoeuvres were carried out from bystanders only in 15% of the cohort; this was associated with significant mortality reduction (85.7 versus 95.8%, chi(2) P0.05). One hundred and thirty-three patients (75%) received assistance from BLS crews while only 45 patients (25%) were assisted by ALS medical personel, with a significant mortality reduction (ALS deaths 86.7%, BLS deaths 97%). Total 24 h survival was 9% and survival at 1 month declined to 6.17%.Quality monitoring produces objective information on interventions and outcomes. Only with this information, is it possible to implement improvement programmes that are planned according to the data presented.
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- 2002
7. Ambulatory and home blood pressure normality: the Pamela Study
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G. Mancia, G. Sega, Alberto Zanchetti, F Valagussa, C. Bravi, and Cesana Gc
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ambulatory blood pressure ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Blood Pressure ,Environment ,Electrocardiography ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,Normality ,media_common ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory ,Middle Aged ,Blood pressure ,Italy ,Echocardiography ,Ambulatory ,Hypertension ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Clinical evaluation - Abstract
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is increasingly used in the clinical evaluation of hypertension. However, a number of limitations restrict its routine use. One of the limitations is a lack of definite conclusions about ambulatory blood pressure normality, because of the shortcomings of previous studies on this issue. In the present study we describe a survey from a large sample of subjects within the age range of 25-64 years. It was found that 24-h average systolic and diastolic blood pressures are markedly lower than clinic blood pressure, and for daytime average and home blood pressure as well. In addition, it was found that the clinic ambulatory or home blood pressure disparity is related to the baseline clinic blood pressure (i.e., it increases with increasing clinic blood pressure values) and that the three pressures (ambulatory, home, clinic) are closely related to each other, thereby allowing the application of correction factors to obtain information on ambulatory or home blood pressure normality. This results in an upper normality limit for 24-h average blood pressure and home blood pressure of around 120 mm Hg systolic and 77 mm Hg diastolic pressure.
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- 1994
8. 190 Ambulatory and home blood pressure reference values
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Giuseppe Mancia, Franco Valagussa, G De Vito, R. Pagani, Cesana Gc, C. Bravi, Alberto Zanchetti, M. Ferrario, Arnaldo Libretti, and Roberto Sega
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood pressure ,Physiology ,business.industry ,Reference values ,Emergency medicine ,Ambulatory ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Published
- 1993
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9. Laparoscopic versus open incisional hernia repair
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L. Erba, Stefano Olmi, Croce E, A. Scaini, Giovanni Cesana, Olmi, S, Scaini, A, Cesana, Gc, Erba, L, and Croce, E
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Incisional hernia ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Risk Assessment ,Postoperative Complications ,Reference Values ,Confidence Intervals ,Secondary Prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Single-Blind Method ,Hernia ,Prospective Studies ,Laparoscopy ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Probability ,Laparotomy ,Pain, Postoperative ,Wound Healing ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Length of Stay ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Hernia, Ventral ,Surgery ,Endoscopy ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Patient Satisfaction ,Anesthesia ,Abdomen ,Female ,Complication ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Incisional hernia is a common complication of abdominal surgery, and it is often a source of morbidity and high costs for health care. This is a case-control study to compare laparoscopic versus anterior-open incisional hernia repair. 170 patients with incisional hernia were enrolled in this study between September 2001 and December 2004. Of these, 85 underwent anterior-open repair (open group: OG), and 85 underwent laparoscopic repair (laparoscopic group: LG). The clinical outcome was determined by a median follow-up of 24.0 months for LG and OG. No difference was noticed between the two groups in age, American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score, body mass index (BMI), and incisional hernia diameter. Mean operative time was 61.0 min for LG patients and 150.9 min for OG patients (p
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- 2007
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10. Favorable cardiovascular risk profile and 10-year coronary heart disease incidence in women and men: results from the Progetto CUORE
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Giancarlo Cesana, Jeremiah Stamler, Salvatore Panico, Diego Vanuzzo, Simona Giampaoli, Chiara Donfrancesco, Michela Trojani, Luigi Palmieri, Roberto Sega, Marco M Ferrario, Paolo Chiodini, Lorenza Pilottoc, Palmieri, L, Donfrancesco, C, Giampaoli, S, Trojani, M, Panico, Salvatore, Vanuzzo, D, Pilotto, L, Cesana, G, Ferrario, M, Chiodini, P, Sega, R, Stamler, J., Panico, S, Cesana, Gc, Chiodini, Paolo, AND STAMLER, J., Troiani, M, and Stamler, J
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,Population ,Coronary Disease ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Risk factor ,Prospective cohort study ,education ,Stroke ,Aged ,education.field_of_study ,Framingham Risk Score ,epidemiology, cardiovascular disease ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Italy ,Population Surveillance ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular risk factor research has recently broadened its focus based on new data indicating the benefits of low risk, i.e. favorable levels of all major risk factors. The aims of this study were to assess further the relation of low risk to coronary heart disease risk, and implications for prevention. DESIGN: We conducted a prospective population-based Italian study, of 7438 men and 13 009 women aged 35-69 years, with a mean follow-up of 10.4 years and validated first coronary events. METHODS: Baseline coronary heart disease risk was classified into three categories: low risk; unfavorable but not high risk; and high risk. To analyze the relation of these risk profiles to coronary heart disease incidence, age-adjusted, sex-averaged coronary heart disease incidence was calculated for persons free of coronary heart disease and stroke, stratified as baseline low risk, unfavorable but not high risk or high risk. To assess the independent relationship of individual risk factors to coronary heart disease incidence, multivariate proportional hazards models were computed for combinations of risk factors. RESULTS: Only 2.7% of participants met low risk criteria; 81.4% were high risk. Age-adjusted coronary heart disease incidence for the whole cohort was 37.1 out of 10000 person-years (men 59.0; women 15.3). No coronary heart disease events occurred in low-risk men, only two in low-risk women. For women and men who were not high risk, the age-sex standardized coronary heart disease rate was 62% lower than for high-risk participants. Blood pressure, need for antihypertensive medication, smoking, hyperglycemia, diabetes, total and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were independently related to coronary heart disease risk. CONCLUSIONS: Favorable levels of all modifiable readily measured risk factors - rare among Italian adults - assure minimal coronary heart disease risk. Population-wide prevention is needed, especially improved lifestyles, to increase the proportion of the population at low risk. © 2006 The European Society of Cardiology.
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- 2006
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