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Metabolic Syndrome in Spain: Prevalence and Coronary Risk Associated With Harmonized Definition and WHO Proposal. DARIOS Study

Authors :
Carmen Lama
María Jesús Guembe
Francisco J. Félix-Redondo
Daniel Fernández-Bergés
Luis M. Lozano
Antonio Cabrera de León
Maite Alzamora
Tomás Vega-Alonso
Honorato Ortiz-Marrón
Jaume Marrugat
Diana Gavrila
Roberto Elosua
Fernando Rigo
Héctor Sanz
Antonio Segura-Fragoso
Source :
Revista Española de Cardiología (English Edition). 65:241-248
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

To update the prevalence of metabolic syndrome and associated coronary risk in Spain, using the harmonized definition and the new World Health Organization proposal (metabolic premorbid syndrome), which excludes diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease.Individual data pooled analysis study of 24,670 individuals from 10 autonomous communities aged 35 to 74 years. Coronary risk was estimated using the REGICOR function.Prevalence of metabolic syndrome was 31% (women 29% [95% confidence interval, 25%-33%], men 32% [95% confidence interval, 29%-35%]). High blood glucose (P=.019) and triglycerides (P.001) were more frequent in men with metabolic syndrome, but abdominal obesity (P.001) and low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (P=.001) predominated in women. Individuals with metabolic syndrome showed moderate coronary risk (8% men, 5% women), although values were higher (P.001) than in the population without the syndrome (4% men, 2% women). Women and men with metabolic syndrome had 2.5 and 2 times higher levels of coronary risk, respectively (P.001). Prevalence of metabolic premorbid syndrome was 24% and the increase in coronary risk was also proportionately larger in women than in men (2 vs 1.5, respectively; P.001).Prevalence of metabolic syndrome is 31%; metabolic premorbid syndrome lowers this prevalence to 24% and delimits the population for primary prevention. The increase in coronary risk is proportionally larger in women, in both metabolic syndrome and metabolic premorbid syndrome.

Details

ISSN :
18855857
Volume :
65
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Revista Española de Cardiología (English Edition)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....294a5c1adae84648e3d71b8e3b6af290