Áhættuþættir kransæðasjúkdóms meðal karla og kvenna á Íslandi : niðurstöður úr hóprannsókn Hjartaverndar 1967-1985

Neðst á síðunni er hægt að nálgast greinina í heild sinni með því að smella á hlekkinn View/Open The Reykjavik Study 1967-1985: Risk factors for coronary heart disease mortality have been investigated in a prospective study of 8001 randomly selected Icelandic men and 8468 women. The men were aged 34...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Guðmundur Þorgeirsson, Davíð Davíðsson, Helgi Sigvaldason, Nikulás Sigfússon
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Icelandic
Published: Læknafélag Íslands, Læknafélag Reykjavíkur 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2336/84681
Description
Summary:Neðst á síðunni er hægt að nálgast greinina í heild sinni með því að smella á hlekkinn View/Open The Reykjavik Study 1967-1985: Risk factors for coronary heart disease mortality have been investigated in a prospective study of 8001 randomly selected Icelandic men and 8468 women. The men were aged 34-64 and the women 34-76 at the time of their first examination. After follow-up from 2-17 years 1140 (14.2%) of the men and 537 (6.3%) of the women had died. Coronary heart disease accounted for 43% of the mortality among the men, cancer 27% and cerebrovascular disease 7%. This distribution is in contrast to what was found among the women. Coronary heart disease accounted for 19.4% of the mortality, cancer 42.3% while the relative contribution of cerebrovascular mortality was similar. The effects of various risk factors were assessed simultaneously with multivariate survival analysis using the Cox's proportional hazards model. Age, serum total cholesterol, triglycerides, smoking and systolic blood pressure were all significant independent risk factors for coronary heart disease mortality in both sexes. Fasting blood sugar was of borderline significance, reaching significance among men, but not among women. Body mass index and former history of smoking were not significant independent risk factors. The relative contribution of major risk factors for coronary heart disease mortality is similar among Icelandic men and women. However, since the women have much lower risk of dying from coronary heart disease than the men the absolute risk associated with each of the risk factors is much lower in the women. Samband hinna ýmsu áhættuþátta og dánartíðni úr kransæðasjúkdómi var kannað í úrtaki 8001 karls og 8468 kvenna sem hafa komið að minnsta kosti einu sinni til skoðunar í framskyggndri hóprannsókn Hjartaverndar. Karlarnir voru á aldrinum 34-74 ára og konurnar 34-76 ára við fyrstu heimsókn í Hjartavernd. í árslok 1985 hafði þessum hópi fólks verið fylgt í tvö til 17 ár. Þá höfðu 1140 (14,2%) karlanna og 537 (6,3%) ...