Lifestyle-related risk factors for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage and its mortality – emphasis on the adverse effects of physical inactivity, obesity and smoking

Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) is a life-threatening stroke type that kills around 40% of patients within the first months following the event. Due to the relatively low incidence (~8 per 100 000), high sudden-death rate (~25% of patients) and complex origin (combination of genetic and en...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rautalin, Ilari
Other Authors: Feigin, Valery, University of Helsinki, Faculty of Medicine, Doctoral Program in Clinical Research, Helsingin yliopisto, lääketieteellinen tiedekunta, Kliininen tohtoriohjelma, Helsingfors universitet, medicinska fakulteten, Doktorandprogrammet i klinisk forskning, Korja, Miikka, Kaprio, Jaakko
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Helsingin yliopisto 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/333697
Description
Summary:Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) is a life-threatening stroke type that kills around 40% of patients within the first months following the event. Due to the relatively low incidence (~8 per 100 000), high sudden-death rate (~25% of patients) and complex origin (combination of genetic and environmental risk factors), investigating aSAH risk factors is extremely challenging. By exploiting several unique cohort studies from Finland and Norway, this thesis aimed to clarify the role of lifestyle-related risk factors on aSAH and its mortality. First, we investigated the relationships between aSAH risk and physical activity on 65 521 Finnish participants by utilizing a large, prospective, longitudinal and population-based cohort study called the National FINRISK study. Second, we pooled the data of the FINRISK cohort with two similar prospective population-based cohorts from Norway, namely the HUNT and Tromsø studies, and used the data of 211 949 adult individuals to investigate the relationship between aSAH risk and obesity. Third, we conducted a systematic review to evaluate the quality of previous literature concerning the obesity paradox (previously reported theory suggesting that obesity may protect critically ill patients from mortality) in aSAH patients. Lastly, in order to evaluate whether smoking contributes to familial manifestation of aSAH, we utilized an older Finnish Twin Cohort including comprehensive data of 16 282 same-sex twin pairs. We found that physical activity during leisure time and commuting was associated with a decreased aSAH risk in both men and women. In addition, these activities diminished the adverse effects of hypertension and smoking. In terms of obesity, we found that the previously reported protective effect of obesity on aSAH risk may be explained by the distorting effects of smoking and hypertension on this association. Therefore, the independent role of obesity on aSAH risk seems to be modest. According to our systematic review, the evidence behind the obesity paradox on ...