The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population

A random population sample of 294 men and 312 women aged 20–64 years, all apparently healthy, were examined following a screening to determine the prevalence of silent ischaemia and its relations to coronary risk factors. Based on exercise testing, the prevalence of silent ischaemia was 2.5% in men...

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Main Author: LØCHEN, M. L.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/13/6/728
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spelling fthighwire:oai:open-archive.highwire.org:ehj:13/6/728 2023-05-15T18:33:52+02:00 The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population LØCHEN, M. L. 1992-06-02 00:00:00.0 text/html http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/13/6/728 en eng Oxford University Press http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/13/6/728 Copyright (C) 1992, European Society of Cardiology Epidemiology TEXT 1992 fthighwire 2007-06-24T15:45:10Z A random population sample of 294 men and 312 women aged 20–64 years, all apparently healthy, were examined following a screening to determine the prevalence of silent ischaemia and its relations to coronary risk factors. Based on exercise testing, the prevalence of silent ischaemia was 2.5% in men and 3.4% in women. In men, silent ischaemia was positively related to systolic blood pressure (P<0.001). The other risk factors did not show any significant associations with silent ischaemia. However, the men with silent ischaemia had a higher coronary heart disease risk score, and a tendency towards more symptoms and signs suggesting a poorer health status than the other men and the women. In the 21 men classified as ‘hypertensives’, silent ischaemia was more common than in the normotensive men (14% versus 2%, P<0.001). No such difference was observed in women. In conclusion, silent ischaemia may be a sign of hypertension and a generally increased risk of coronary heart disease in men, but probably not in the majority of women. This further supports that exercise electrocardiography has no role in screening asymptomatic persons for coronary heart disease, probably with the exception of middle-aged men with an increased risk. Text Tromso Tromso HighWire Press (Stanford University) Tromso ENVELOPE(16.546,16.546,68.801,68.801)
institution Open Polar
collection HighWire Press (Stanford University)
op_collection_id fthighwire
language English
topic Epidemiology
spellingShingle Epidemiology
LØCHEN, M. L.
The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
topic_facet Epidemiology
description A random population sample of 294 men and 312 women aged 20–64 years, all apparently healthy, were examined following a screening to determine the prevalence of silent ischaemia and its relations to coronary risk factors. Based on exercise testing, the prevalence of silent ischaemia was 2.5% in men and 3.4% in women. In men, silent ischaemia was positively related to systolic blood pressure (P<0.001). The other risk factors did not show any significant associations with silent ischaemia. However, the men with silent ischaemia had a higher coronary heart disease risk score, and a tendency towards more symptoms and signs suggesting a poorer health status than the other men and the women. In the 21 men classified as ‘hypertensives’, silent ischaemia was more common than in the normotensive men (14% versus 2%, P<0.001). No such difference was observed in women. In conclusion, silent ischaemia may be a sign of hypertension and a generally increased risk of coronary heart disease in men, but probably not in the majority of women. This further supports that exercise electrocardiography has no role in screening asymptomatic persons for coronary heart disease, probably with the exception of middle-aged men with an increased risk.
format Text
author LØCHEN, M. L.
author_facet LØCHEN, M. L.
author_sort LØCHEN, M. L.
title The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
title_short The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
title_full The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
title_fullStr The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
title_full_unstemmed The Tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
title_sort tromso study: the prevalence of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischaemia and relation to risk factors for coronary heart disease in an apparently healthy population
publisher Oxford University Press
publishDate 1992
url http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/13/6/728
long_lat ENVELOPE(16.546,16.546,68.801,68.801)
geographic Tromso
geographic_facet Tromso
genre Tromso
Tromso
genre_facet Tromso
Tromso
op_relation http://eurheartj.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/13/6/728
op_rights Copyright (C) 1992, European Society of Cardiology
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