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1.
BACKGROUND: Migrants from the Indian subcontinent (South Asian migrants) in the United Kingdom have high mortality from coronary heart disease (CHD) in comparison to the indigenous population. Few studies have assessed the prevalence of CHD in South Asians, and the applicability of conventional survey methods in this population is not known. In this pilot random population survey of South Asian men and women living in West London, the prevalence of CHD as judged by the Rose questionnaire, past cardiac history, cardiologist and resting electrocardiogram were compared. METHODS: Subjects aged 30-64 years from randomly selected households were invited for a cardiological assessment. A lay person administered the Rose questionnaire and recorded the past cardiac history. A cardiologist also made an independent assessment and a 12-lead electrocardiogram was recorded and analysed according to the Minnesota code. RESULTS: Three hundred and seventy-six individuals (192 men and 184 women) were assessed. The prevalence of angina in men and women, respectively, was 3.1% and 4.9% by the Rose questionnaire; 2.6% and 2.2% by past cardiac history; and 4.2% and 0.5% according to the cardiologist. The prevalence of myocardial infarction in men and women, respectively, was 5.2% and 2.2% by the Rose questionnaire, 3.6% and zero by past cardiac history and 3.6% and 0.5% by the cardiologist. Q/QS codes were present in 1.6% men and 0.5% women and ischaemic codes in 13% men and 14% women. Ischaemic changes were not associated with any cardiac history in 72% of men and 92% of women. For a diagnosis of CHD in men, there was poor agreement between the Rose questionnaire and either the past cardiac history or the cardiologist's assessment, but moderate agreement between the past cardiac history and the cardiologist. Agreement was poor between all three methods for a positive diagnosis of CHD in women. CONCLUSION: Current accepted epidemiological methods for assessing CHD prevalence may be inaccurate in South Asians, especially women. Electrocardiogram abnormalities suggestive of ischaemia are common in South Asians and are usually not associated with evidence of CHD. Thus, their value as indicators of CHD is questionable.  相似文献   

2.
BACKGROUND: Because of the beneficial effects of estrogen, premenopausal women are normally protected against coronary heart disease (CHD) and are at lower risk for myocardial infarction; consequently, CHD occurs very rarely in menstrually active women. Given this background, the aim of the present study was to test the hypothesis that decreased concentrations of estrogen are associated with CHD in premenopausal women. METHODS: Fourteen premenopausal women with CHD were investigated and compared with a healthy control group comparable for age and cardiovascular risk factors. Relevant characteristics of patients and controls were assessed: age, blood pressure, body mass index, total cholesterol and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, former pregnancies, ovariectomy and related surgical interventions, smoking history and former use of oral contraceptives. To ensure the premenopausal status of the participants, the regularity of the menstrual cycle and the follicle-stimulating hormone concentrations were also assessed. Plasma estradiol and progesterone and urine estrone concentrations (24 h urine collection) were measured at day 6 after estimated ovulation to assess the relative increase in plasma estradiol and progesterone during the second half of the menstrual cycle. RESULTS: Compared with the control group, premenopausal women with CHD had significantly lower concentrations of plasma estradiol (408.9 +/- 141 pmol/l and 287.8 +/- 109 pmol/l respectively; P = 0.0228) and total estrogen (2061 +/- 693 pg/mumol creatinine and 1607 +/- 448 pg/mumol creatinine respectively; P = 0.025) in the urine. However, the progesterone concentrations were not significantly different between the groups. These findings might be explained by a partial ovarian dysfunction, as the patient group had a significantly higher number of tubal sterilizations (eight compared with one). CONCLUSION: Our data provide support for the hypothesis that decreased concentrations of estradiol might be an additional pathogenetic factor for the development of CHD in menstrually active premenopausal women.  相似文献   

3.
Assessment and treatment of the stressors associated with major medical illness such as CHD without regard to gender overlooks women's issues in some extremely fundamental ways. To ensure that rehabilitation formats are relevant for women, more qualitative studies are needed so that women can give voice to the story of an MI recovery from a feminine perspective. It is vital to understand the psychologic contribution to the development and treatment of CHD both as described by women in their own words and as evaluated by distinctly feminine constructs. Assessment of psychosocial factors should be an essential component of a CHD diagnostic evaluation. Although little can be done about a genetic predisposition to CHD, education and personal support can help women make needed lifestyle changes to forestall further cardiac damage and to improve a woman's level of functioning. The capacity to take charge of one's life and social support are strong counterpoints to negative psychosocial symptoms of CHD. There is a strong need to make rehabilitation programs for women with CHD contextually congruent. Strategies to involve women in cardiac rehabilitation must take into account a woman's needs, providing both age-appropriate physical exercise and psychologic social support for women at times convenient to their schedules. Women must be given permission to let go of normally performed duties after a major cardiac event and to seek out what is meaningful. Group formats that offer women essential social support, an opportunity to verbally process the meaning of a life-threatening diagnosis, an opportunity to share their experiences with other women, and the ability to reconstruct a new sense of self based on feminine constructs may be as important for women as other lifestyle structural components in effective rehabilitation programs. Society must reclassify the CHD disease process as one that equally affects women. Research studies with women as primary subjects and key informants can provide needed direction in the identification of psychosocial risk factors and appropriate treatments to reduce alarming morbidity and mortality of CHD in women. More data are needed about the psychosocial mechanisms that aggravate and mediate physiologic responses in CHD in women.  相似文献   

4.
BACKGROUND: Several epidemiological studies have suggested an association of passive smoking with coronary heart disease (CHD). However, few studies have taken account of exposure to passive smoking in the workplace. Additionally, several studies have been unable to control for the full range of potential confounding factors. We examined prospectively the relationship of passive smoking with risk of CHD in a cohort of women. METHODS AND RESULTS: The study was carried out in an ongoing prospective cohort of US female nurses, in whom we assessed exposure to passive smoking at home and at work as well as duration of years spent living with someone who smoked regularly. We studied 32046 women 36 to 61 years of age in 1982 who had never smoked and were free of diagnosed CHD, stroke, and cancer. During 10 years of follow-up (1982 to 1992), 152 incident cases of CHD (127 nonfatal myocardial infarction and 25 fatal CHD) occurred. Compared with women not exposed to passive smoking, the relative risks of total CHD-adjusted for a broad range of cardiovascular risk factors-were 1.58 (95% CI, 0.93 to 2.68) among those reporting occasional exposure and 1.91 (95% CI, 1.11 to 3.28) among women reporting regular exposure to passive smoking at home or work. There was no relation apparent between duration of living with a smoker and risk of CHD. CONCLUSIONS: Despite the fact that exposure to passive smoking was assessed by self-report and only at baseline (as well as other limitations), these data suggest that regular exposure to passive smoking at home or work increases the risk of CHD among nonsmoking women.  相似文献   

5.
BACKGROUND: Coronary heart disease (CHD) and decline in cognitive functioning and dementia are common problems in the elderly. Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are connected with vascular dementia, but less is known about cognitive functioning among elderly patients with CHD based on population studies. OBJECTIVE: To describe the associations between CHD and cognitive impairment among the elderly. POPULATION AND METHODS: Of the total population of the Lieto study (488 community-dwelling men and 708 women, >/=64 years old), the ambulatory patients with CHD (89 men and 73 women) and sex- and age-matched controls without any sign of CHD (178 men and 146 women) were selected to make up the study population. CHD was defined as the presence of angina pectoris or a past myocardial infarction. Cognitive assessment was based on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). RESULTS: The total MMSE scores, the MMSE subtest scores and the overall test-based cognitive functioning did not differ between patients and controls. Among men, higher MMSE subscores in orientation and language were related to more severe chest pain. According to logistic regression analyses, the cognitive impairment of men was associated with high age, the use of cardiac glycosides and physical disability. Among women, cognitive impairment was associated with high age and the use of antipsychotics. CONCLUSION: In general, CHD has no independent association with cognitive impairment among the non-institutionalized community-living elderly. Among men, however, a complicated CHD may negatively affect cognitive functioning.  相似文献   

6.
Objective: The authors sought to evaluate the association of self-efficacy with objective measures of cardiac function, subsequent hospitalization for heart failure (HF), and all-cause mortality. Design: Observational cohort of ambulatory patients with stable CHD. The authors measured self-efficacy using a published, validated, 5-item summative scale, the Sullivan Self-Efficacy to Maintain Function Scale. The authors also performed a cardiac assessment, including an exercise treadmill test with stress echocardiography. Main Outcome Measures: Hospitalizations for HF, as determined by blinded review of medical records, and all-cause mortality, with adjustment for demographics, medical history, medication use, depressive symptoms, and social support. Results: Of the 1,024 predominately male, older CHD patients, 1013 (99%) were available for follow-up, 124 (12%) were hospitalized for HF, and 235 (23%) died during 4.3 years of follow-up. Mean cardiac self-efficacy score was 9.7 (SD 4.5, range 0–20), corresponding to responses between “not at all confident” and “somewhat confident” for ability to maintain function. Lower self-efficacy predicted subsequent HF hospitalization (OR per SD decrease = 1.4, p = .0006), and all-cause mortality (OR per SD decrease = 1.4, p Conclusion: Among patients with CHD, self-efficacy was a reasonable proxy for predicting HF hospitalizations. The increased risk of HF associated with lower baseline self-efficacy was explained by worse cardiac function. These findings indicate that measuring cardiac self-efficacy provides a rapid and potentially useful assessment of cardiac function among outpatients with CHD. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

7.
In July 1994, we performed orthotopic heart transplantation for a patient with hypertrophic myocardiopathy, who had had open heart surgery enlarging the right ventricular outlet. The patient had an excellent postoperative result. He received triple-drug immunosuppressive therapy. Large dose of methyl-prednisolone was used successfully for his acute rejection reaction. At present, the patient is living well with good cardiac, hepatic and renal function. We described donor heart harvest, myocardial protection, operative procedure, immune monitoring, anti-rejection and anti-infectious therapy. We introduced the process of protecting donor heart on the way to hospital by retrograde perfusion with medium hypothermic oxygenated-blood combined with St. Thomas cardioplegia. Besides endomyocardial biopsy, other noninvasive examinations such as noninvasive cardiac output monitoring could be helpful to monitor acute rejection reaction.  相似文献   

8.
The relation between plasma lipids and coronary heart disease (CHD) in the elderly is still debated, as well as the proposed role of lipoproteins as markers of longevity. In this study both normolipidemic elderly and middle-aged women with CHD showed higher triglycerides and apolipoprotein B levels and lower high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I levels in comparison with age-matched subjects without CHD. In the middle-aged group, hypertension and HDL-cholesterol levels and, in the elderly group, only HDL-cholesterol levels were independently associated with CHD. No significant difference was found between a group of healthy centenarians and elderly and middle-aged subjects without CHD. These data suggest that plasma lipids are also related to CHD in the elderly and that, even if at present we are not able to consider them as predictors of longevity, some lipoprotein features may contribute to select subgroups of subjects in which other factors play a further role in life expectancy.  相似文献   

9.
Self- and spouse ratings of anger and hostility were examined as predictors of coronary heart disease (CHD) in 185 cardiac patients. Patients completed the Multidimensional Anger Inventory (MAI) and the Marlowe-Crowne Social Desirability (MCSD) Scale; the MAI (rewritten to 3rd person) was completed by Ss' spouses or by a peer. Thallium scans were used to measure CHD status. Results show that patient-rated MAI scores were inversely correlated with MCSD. There were no gender differences for patient-rated MAI scores, but spouse ratings showed gender effects for Anger-Arousal and Hostile Outlook: Women rated their husbands higher than men rated their wives. Patients with positive thallium scans were no different from those without CHD on patient-rated MAI scores; however, spouse ratings indicated that those with CHD had higher Hostile Outlook and Anger-In scores. After accounting for the effects of traditional CHD risk factors, only spouse-rated hostility contributed significant incremental variance to the prediction of CHD status. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

10.
Coronary artery diseases may categorized into asymptomatic disease, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, and sudden coronary death. Unstable angina, acute myocardial infarction, and sudden cardiac death are known as the acute coronary syndromes. Coronary atheroma is unstable in the patients with acute coronary syndromes. Stable plaques will be unstable when dynamic alterations occur. The alterations are plaque rupture, plaque hemorrhage, coronary thrombosis and vasospasm. They act each other. We analysed the histopathology of coronary arteries who died of acute myocardial infarction in 85 cases. It showed that the risk factors of plaque rupture are clusters of form cells, eccentric plaque with soft lipid rich core, and thinning of fibrous cap in atheroma. Most of these cases ruptured at edge of the atheroma.  相似文献   

11.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the major cause of death in the United States. Major modifiable risk factors for CHD are hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and cigarette smoking, with concomitant risk factors, especially left ventricular hypertrophy, that act synergistically to significantly increase overall risk. Antihypertensive therapy, while reducing the incidence of stroke, has not consistently reduced the incidence of CHD. This may be a result, in part, of adverse effects on the metabolic profile, especially on blood lipids, which are induced by diuretics and certain beta-blockers. Other antihypertensive agents appear to be either lipid neutral, such as calcium channel blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, or lipid positive, such as selective alpha 1-blockers. The choice of initial antihypertensive therapy should be made with all of a patient's risk factors in mind. In addition to the drugs recommended in the 1988 Guidelines of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure, selective alpha 1-blockers should also be considered since they improve the lipid profile as well as reduce blood pressure.  相似文献   

12.
Two competing hypotheses explaining gender bias in cardiac care were tested. The first posits that women's coronary heart disease (CHD) symptoms are simply misinterpreted or discounted. The second posits that women's CHD symptoms are misinterpreted when presented in the context of stress. In two studies, medical students and residents randomized to 2 (male vs. female) × 2 (stress vs. nostress) experiments read vignettes of patients with CHD symptoms and indicated their diagnosis, treatment, and symptom origin interpretation. Both studies disconfirmed the first hypothesis and strongly supported the second. Only when stress was added did women receive significantly lower CHD diagnoses and cardiologist referrals than men and did the origin interpretation of women's CHD symptoms (e.g., chest pain) shift from organic to psychogenic. Neither participants' gender nor their attitude toward women influenced assessments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

13.
Practicing psychologists who treat depression in women need to consider their depressed clients at heightened risk for heart disease. In this article, the authors review evidence supporting the link between depression in women and their subsequent increased risk for illness and death from coronary heart disease (CHD). Although further research is needed, the evidence to date suggests that women in treatment for depression should, at the very least, be educated about their increased risk for CHD, and, ideally, psychotherapy for depressed women should incorporate interventions designed either to reduce risk factors for CHD, such as obesity, smoking, and alcohol abuse, or to enhance health-maintenance behaviors, such as exercise and adherence to a low-fat diet, which are associated with cardiovascular health. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

14.
This study examines factors influencing the length of intensive care unit stay for patients after coronary artery bypass surgery. Profiles of patients with selected lengths of ICU stay were identified for Group 1 (< or =1 day) and Group 2 (> or =2 days). Medical records of 175 patients who had undergone this procedure at an urban teaching hospital were reviewed. Patients who had a 1-day ICU length of stay were younger (mean=62.39, SD=10.88) and had comorbidities such as hypertension. Those patients with an ICU length of stay 2 days or longer were older (mean=68.18, SD=11.84) and had preoperative comorbidities such as congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, ejection fraction <50%, and need for an intra-aortic balloon pump. Atrial dysrhythmias, low cardiac output syndrome, renal insufficiency, and respiratory insufficiency were the postoperative complications associated with a prolonged ICU length of stay. Knowledge of the factors influencing selected lengths of ICU stay will enable nurses to choose patients for critical pathways and to anticipate postoperative problems in high-risk patients.  相似文献   

15.
Summarizes results of research dealing with time within the cardiac cycle as an experimental variable. In a variety of different experiments, meaningful sensorimotor events produced changes in heart rate that were systematically related to where in the cardiac cycle the events occurred. This function is proposed as a noninvasive measure in intact humans of cortically mediated effects on vagal control of the heart. Time within the cardiac cycle is also a dependent variable: Self-initiated responses are postponed to increasingly later times as momentary heart rate increases. It is hypothesized that this may result from visceral afferent feedback to the CNS via the baroreceptor nerves. Preliminary results are presented from acute cat experiments showing that changes in frequency of carotid sinus stimulation and differences in the direction of change affect the temporal pattern of discharge of the carotid sinus nerve. (19 ref) (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

16.
BACKGROUND: The first Whitehall Study showed an inverse social gradient in mortality from coronary heart disease (CHD) among British civil servants--namely, that there were higher rates in men of lower employment grade. About a quarter of this gradient could be attributed to coronary risk factors. We analysed 5-year CHD incidence rates from the Whitehall II study to assess the contribution to the social gradient of psychosocial work environment, social support, coronary risk factors, and physical height. METHODS: Data were collected in the first three phases of examination of men and women in the Whitehall II study. 7372 people were contacted on all three occasions. Mean length of follow-up was 5.3 years. Characteristics from the baseline, phase 1, questionnaire, and examination were related to newly reported CHD in people without CHD at baseline. Three self-reported CHD outcomes were examined: angina and chest pain from the Rose questionnaire, and doctor-diagnosed ischaemia. The contribution of different factors to the socioeconomic differences in incident CHD was assessed by adjustment of odds ratios. FINDINGS: Compared with men in the highest grade (administrators), men in the lowest grade (clerical and office-support staff) had an age-adjusted odds ratio of developing any new CHD of 1.50. The largest difference was for doctor-diagnosed ischaemia (odds ratio for the lowest compared with the highest grade 2.27). For women, the odds ratio in the lowest grade was 1.47 for any CHD. Of factors examined, the largest contribution to the socioeconomic gradient in CHD frequency was from low control at work. Height and standard coronary risk factors made smaller contributions. Adjustment for all these factors reduced the odds ratios for newly reported CHD in the lowest grade from 1.5 to 0.95 in men, and from 1.47 to 1.07 in women. INTERPRETATION: Much of the inverse social gradient in CHD incidence can be attributed to differences in psychosocial work environment. Additional contributions were made by coronary risk factors--mainly smoking--and from factors that act early in life, as represented by physical height.  相似文献   

17.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death among women in the United States, yet few studies have specifically targeted women who have CHD, and still fewer have examined how behavior and psychosocial factors affect lifestyle change. This article reviews what is known about lifestyle change, with an emphasis on psychosocial factors related to change, in women with CHD. Studies exploring individual lifestyle improvement areas--exercise, nutrition, smoking, and social support--as well as studies of comprehensive lifestyle changes are reviewed. Strong conclusions were precluded because of the paucity of studies, widely variable and inconsistent findings, flawed methodologies, and inadequate reporting of results. Future research is advised to develop and test intervention programs for women with CHD, addressing barriers to participation, lifestyle change patterns, psychosocial and quality of life outcomes, and physiologic change.  相似文献   

18.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is a multifactorial disease and CHD risk should be estimated by assessing all cardiovascular risk factors simultaneously. Simply adding up the number of factors with 'at risk' values fails to identify high-risk subjects with multiple risk factors at moderately elevated values. A more efficient approach is to use a quantitative multivariate risk score. A number of overseas studies have produced CHD risk scoring systems for men. There are few risk scores developed for women and no CHD risk scores have been developed from Australian data. This study used data on CHD risk factors and morbidity/mortality follow-up for the 1978 Busselton Health Survey participants to provide age-specific estimates of absolute risk of CHD hospitalisation or death, and to develop multivariate CHD risk scoring systems for men and women. The scores are based on age, blood pressure, anti-hypertensive medication, total and HDL cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, left ventricular hypertrophy and previous history of CHD. The generalisability and applicability of these risk estimation systems to Australian populations in the late 1990s is discussed.  相似文献   

19.
BACKGROUND: Although multiple studies have shown that the left ventricular assist device (LVAD) improves distorted cardiac geometry, the pathological mechanisms of the "reverse remodeling" of the heart are unknown. Our goal was to determine the effects of LVAD support on cardiac myocyte size and shape. METHODS AND RESULTS: Isolated myocytes were obtained at cardiac transplantation from 30 failing hearts (12 ischemic, 18 nonischemic) without LVAD support, 10 failing hearts that received LVAD support for 75+/-15 days, and 6 nonfailing hearts. Cardiac myocyte volume, length, width, and thickness were determined by use of previously validated techniques. Isolated myocytes from myopathic hearts exhibited increased volume, length, width, and length-to-thickness ratio compared with normal myocytes (P<0.05). However, there were no differences in any parameter between myocytes from ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathic hearts. Long-term LVAD support resulted in a 28% reduction in myocyte volume, 20% reduction in cell length, 20% reduction in cell width, and 32% reduction in cell length-to-thickness ratio (P<0.05). In contrast, LVAD support was associated with no change in cell thickness. These cellular changes were associated with reductions in left ventricular dilation and left ventricular mass measured echocardiographically in 6 of 10 LVAD-supported patients. CONCLUSIONS: These studies suggest that the regression of cellular hypertrophy is a major contributor to the "reverse remodeling" of the heart after LVAD implantation. The favorable alterations in geometry that occur in parallel fashion at both the organ and cellular levels may contribute to reduced wall stress and improved mechanical performance after LVAD support.  相似文献   

20.
Objective: Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) reflects a prolonged stress reaction and dysregulation of the stress response system and is hypothesized to increase risk of developing coronary heart disease (CHD). No study has tested this hypothesis in women even though PTSD is more prevalent among women than men. This study aims to examine whether higher levels of PTSD symptoms are associated with increased risk of incident CHD among women. Design: A prospective study using data from women participating in the Baltimore cohort of the Epidemiologic Catchment Area study (n = 1059). Past year trauma and associated PTSD symptoms were assessed using the NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule. Main Outcome Measures: Incident CHD occurring during the 14-year follow-up through 1996. Results: Women with five or more symptoms were at over three times the risk of incident CHD compared with those with no symptoms (age-adjusted OR = 3.21, 95% CI: 1.29-7.98). Findings were maintained after controlling for standard coronary risk factors as well as depression or trait anxiety. Conclusion: PTSD symptoms may have damaging effects on physical health for civilian community-dwelling women, with high levels of PTSD symptoms associated with increased risk of CHD-related morbidity and mortality. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved)  相似文献   

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