Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0007222 (cardiovascular disease)
65,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have examined the use of tranquillizers by 7,735 middle-aged men currently enrolled in the British Regional Heart Study, a prospective study of cardiovascular disease in 24 towns throughout Great Britain. Tranquillizer use was reported by 620 men (8 per cent). There was a slightly greater prevalence of tranquillizer use in the older men and the non-manual workers. Men with physical disease diagnosed by their doctor or by objective measurements during the study were more likely to be using tranquillizers than men with no physical disease. This was most evident for ischaemic heart disease, however diagnosed, and for hypertension diagnosed by their doctors. There was an inverse relationship between drinking and tranquillizer usage: heavy drinkers had lower rates of usage. There was no association between tranquillizer use and smoking habits.This study indicates that tranquillizer use in these middle-aged men is little influenced by age, social class or smoking, but that there is a strong, positive association between tranquillizer use and the presence of doctor-diagnosed physical disease. While our data provide support for the suggestion that alcohol and tranquillizers may be used interchangeably by some individuals, this finding could also be an outcome of doctors' and patients' awareness of the undesirable effects of combining alcohol and tranquillizers.
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PMID:Tranquillizer use in middle-aged British men. 715 75

The association between physical activity at work and at leisure, coronary risk factors, social class and mortality has been studied in about 15000 Oslo men, aged 40-49, without known cardiovascular disease or diabetes at a screening examination for coronary risk factors. Four-year total and CHD mortality showed a decrease with increasing degree of leisure activity, and an increase with increasing work activity. The three conventional coronary risk factors--serum cholesterol, systolic blood pressure (SBP) and number of cigarettes--associated negatively with physical leisure activity, whereas they all associated positively with physical activity at work. Men in lower social classes were less active at leisure but more active at work than men in the higher classes. In a multivariate analysis of variance with coronary risk score (based on SBP, serum total cholesterol and number of cigarettes), social class and physical activity, the predictive power of physical leisure activity for future death was almost as good as the coronary risk score. Physical activity at work, on the other hand, was not an independent risk factor either for total or for CHD mortality.
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PMID:Physical activity at work and at leisure in relation to coronary risk factors and social class. A 4-year mortality follow-up. The Oslo study. 723 3

The relationship between alcohol consumption and physical fitness was analyzed using data from the baseline examination of the Coronary Artery Disease Risk Development In Young Adults study (CARDIA), a longitudinal study of the evolution of risk factors for cardiovascular disease in Black and White men and women aged 18-30 years. Two parameters of submaximal exercise treadmill testing were evaluated: time to heart rate 130 and duration of the treadmill test. In men and women qualified for treadmill testing, time to reach heart rate 130 was positively associated with ethanol intake. The relationship between fitness and ethanol intake persisted in sex-specific analysis after adjustment for age, ethnicity, systolic blood pressure, sum of subscapular and triceps skinfolds, and physical activity level. The magnitude and strength of the relationship were greater in women than in men. A negative interaction between ethanol intake and smoking status was evident. Linear regression coefficients in men were 0.29 sec to heart rate 130/ml ethanol/day in nonsmokers and -0.06 sec to heart rate 130/ml ethanol/day in smokers. Linear regression coefficients in women were 1.07 sec to heart rate 130/ml ethanol/day in nonsmokers and 0.23 sec to heart rate 130/ml ethanol/day in smokers. Men and women who smoked showed 31 sec longer time to heart rate 130, regardless of ethanol intake. Mean daily ethanol intake was positively associated with duration of treadmill testing in women, but weakly associated with duration in men. These results show increased physical fitness as ethanol intake increased in women and nonsmoking men and mildly decreased physical fitness as ethanol consumption increases among men who smoke.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Alcohol consumption and physical fitness among young adults. 748 15

A follow-up study was conducted to clarify the relationship between physical-strength level and risk of death from all causes and from cancer and cardiovascular disease. The 7286 persons who were examined at seven health-promotion centers throughout Japan between 1982 and 1987 were followed up. By January 1992, 6259 persons (85.9%) had been contacted by questionnaire. They included 3117 men (49.8% of all subjects studied) (average age 53.6 years at baseline, SD = 9.0 years, range 40-84 years), and 3142 women (50.2%) (average age 54.5 years at baseline, SD = 8.5 years, range 40-85 years). The follow-up period for each person averaged 6.1 years, for a total of 38,253 person-years. During this period, 155 deaths were reported. At baseline, five physical-strength tests (grip strength, side step, vertical jump, standing trunk flexion, and sit-ups) were performed. Five clinical laboratory tests (thickness of skinfold, blood sugar, total serum cholesterol, percent vital lung capacity, and blood pressure) were also conducted. The examinees were questioned about smoking status (current smoker, nonsmoker, and ex-smoker). Men with thicker skinfold [relative risk (RR) = 2.11] and higher levels of blood sugar (RR = 1.89) had an excess risk of death from all causes. Men with higher serum cholesterol (RR = 5.08), thicker skinfold (RR = 4.54), and elevated blood pressure (RR = 2.33) had an excess risk of death from cardiovascular disease. In women, no relationship was seen between clinical laboratory tests and an excess risk of death. Men exhibiting lower values for side step (RR = 2.43), vertical jump (RR = 2.37), sit-ups (RR = 1.93) and grip strength (RR = 1.92) also had an excess risk of death from all causes. Furthermore, men with lower heights for vertical jump (RR = 5.51) had an excess risk of death from cardiovascular disease. After adjustment for skinfold thickness, blood sugar, total serum cholesterol, blood pressure, percent vital lung capacity and smoking status, men with a lower level of side step, vertical jump, and grip strength had an excess risk of death from all causes. No such relationship was seen between physical-strength level and an excess risk of death in women. It is concluded that a low level of physical strength might be significantly correlated with subsequent health outcomes in men.
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PMID:Physical-strength tests and mortality among visitors to health-promotion centers in Japan. 749 May 98

The authors assessed the relation between the extent and progression of baldness and coronary heart disease. Baldness was assessed twice, in 1956 and in 1962, in a cohort of 2,017 men from Framingham, Massachusetts. Extent of baldness was classified in terms of number of bald areas: no areas bald (n = 153), one area bald (n = 420), two areas bald (n = 587), and all areas bald (n = 857). Men who were assessed both times and who had two or fewer bald areas during the first evaluation were classified into one of three groups: "mild or no progression," "moderate progression," or "rapid progression." The cohort was followed for up to 30 years for new occurrences of coronary heart disease, coronary heart disease death, cardiovascular disease, and death due to any cause. The relations between the extent and progression of baldness and the aforementioned outcomes were assessed using a Cox proportional hazards model, adjusting for age and other known cardiovascular disease risk factors. Extent of baldness was not associated with any of the outcomes. However, the amount of progression of baldness was associated with coronary heart disease occurrence (relative risk (RR) = 2.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.3-4.4), coronary heart disease mortality (RR = 3.8, 95% CI 1.9-7.7), and all-cause mortality (RR = 2.4, 95% CI 1.5-3.8). Rapid hair loss may be a marker for coronary heart disease.
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PMID:Baldness and coronary heart disease rates in men from the Framingham Study. 757 59

The effects of marital status and change in marital status on mortality among middle-aged British men were examined in a prospective cohort study, the British Regional Heart Study. This is a nationally representative cohort of men selected at random from general medical practices in 24 towns in England, Wales, and Scotland. It comprises 7,735 men aged 40-59 recruited in 1978-1980 and followed up for 11.5 years. Marital status and a wide range of biologic and lifestyle variables were measured at screening, and changes in marital status were assessed after 5 years. Single (never-married) men had an increased risk of cardiovascular disease mortality (relative risk (RR) = 1.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0-2.2) and noncancer, noncardiovascular mortality (RR = 1.8, 95% CI 1.1-3.3) after adjustment for potentially confounding variables: age, social class, smoking, recall of ischemic heart disease, recall of diabetes mellitus, use of antihypertensive drugs, body mass index, physical activity, alcohol intake, employment status, systolic blood pressure, blood cholesterol, and forced expiratory volume in 1 second. Divorced/separated men were not at increased risk of mortality, and widowed men were only at increased risk of other non-cardiovascular disease mortality (RR = 2.4, 95% CI 1.1-5.3). There was no effect of marital status on cancer mortality. Men who divorced during the follow-up period were at increased risk of both cardiovascular disease mortality (RR = 1.9, 95% CI 0.9-3.9) and other non-cardiovascular disease mortality (RR = 4.0, 95% CI 1.5-10.6), but men who became widowed during this time were not at increased risk. The excess mortality among single and recently divorced men was not explained by poor health or by exposure to a wide range of risk factors. It is unlikely that selection bias, chance, or artifact is responsible for the general relation between marital status and mortality. Variable and incomplete control for confounding by socioeconomic status and risk factors for common diseases may explain some of the inconsistencies observed between studies and between different categories of unmarried men (i.e., never-married, widowed, and divorced). It is possible that the social support offered by marriage exerts a protective effect for some men.
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PMID:Marital status, change in marital status, and mortality in middle-aged British men. 757 60

The relationship between ECG abnormalities and mortality was studied in 4797 males and 4320 females aged 25 to 74 years who took part in the Belgian Inter-university Research on Nutrition and Health (The BIRNH study). At entry all were free of angina, had no history of acute myocardial infarction and showed no evidence of an old infarction on their baseline ECG. They were followed for an average of 5.6 years, and follow-up for vital status was completed satisfactorily in 99.5%. ECG abnormalities were grouped using several classifications: any abnormality, major and minor abnormalities, ischaemic changes, left ventricular hypertrophy and the separate Minnesota codes IV (ST depression), V (abnormal T-wave) and VIII (arrhythmias). Using logistic regression analysis, adjustment of odds ratios for cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality was done for age, systolic blood pressure, serum total cholesterol and uric acid, diabetes, smoking and antihypertensive drug treatment. Men outnumbered women more than twice in total and CVD mortality. Multivariate analysis showed that the presence of major abnormalities on the ECG was significantly related to CVD mortality in both men and women (adjusted odds ratios 2.73 and 4.40 respectively). In contrast, minor abnormalities were not independently associated with CVD mortality. In men, ST depression (OR = 5.58), signs of an ischaemic ECG (OR = 3.02) and an abnormal T-wave (OR = 2.58) were independently related to CVD mortality. In women primarily a ST depression (OR = 5.87) and arrhythmias (OR = 4.22) had a significant independent effect on CVD mortality.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The predictive value of electrocardiographic abnormalities for total and cardiovascular disease mortality in men and women. 769 28

Marital status and indices of social support are associated with mortality due to coronary heart disease and stroke. This association seems not entirely due to differences in recognised cardiovascular disease risk factors. The Western Sydney Stroke risk in the Elderly Study examined the relationship between marital status, living arrangements, widowhood and extent of social support, and risk factors for cardiovascular disease in men and women aged over 65 years. Unmarried men had the lowest mean HDL-C levels. Men living alone had the highest mean systolic blood pressures. The lower mean HDL-C levels and higher DBP levels seen among widows were not statistically significant after adjustment for differences in past medical history and education levels. The extent of social support was not associated with any significant differences in cardiovascular risk factor levels among men or women. We conclude that some of the increased risk of cardiovascular disease associated with socio-demographic factors among men in this age-group may be due to differences in primary cardiovascular disease risk factors. However, some of the mechanisms underlying risk of cardiovascular disease in this age-group remains obscure.
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PMID:Social support, marital status and living arrangement correlates of cardiovascular disease risk factors in the elderly. 774 15

A sodium-reduced diet is frequently recommended for hypertensive individuals. To determine the relationship of sodium intake to subsequent cardiovascular disease, we assessed the experience of participants in a worksite-based cohort of hypertensive subjects. The 24-hour urinary excretion of sodium (UNaV), potassium, creatinine, and plasma renin activity was measured in 2937 mildly and moderately hypertensive subjects who were unmedicated for at least 3-4 weeks. Morbidity and mortality in these systematically treated subjects were ascertained. Men and women were stratified according to sex-specific quartiles of UNaV. Subjects in these strata were similar in race, cardiovascular status, and pretreatment and intreatment blood pressure. Subjects with lower UNaV were thinner, excreted less potassium, and had higher plasma renin activity. During an average 3.8 years of follow-up, a total of 55 myocardial infarctions occurred. Myocardial infarction and UNaV were inversely associated in the total population and in men but not in women, who sustained only nine events. In men, age- and race-adjusted myocardial infarction incidence in the lowest versus highest UNaV quartile was 11.5 versus 2.5 (relative risk, 4.3, 95% confidence interval, 1.7-10.6). No association was observed between non-cardiovascular disease mortality (n = 11) and UNaV. There was a significant linear trend in proportions of myocardial infarction by UNaV quartile, with a break point after the lowest UNaV quartile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Low urinary sodium is associated with greater risk of myocardial infarction among treated hypertensive men. 859 81

We investigated the prevalence and associations with cardiovascular symptoms, signs, and risk factors of common carotid atherosclerosis using B-mode ultrasonography in a population sample of 182 eastern Finnish men aged 70 to 89 years. Men were examined in 1989 as a part of the 30-year follow-up examination of the eastern Finnish cohort of the Seven Countries Study. The mean maximal intima-media thickness (IMT) of the right and left common carotid arteries was 1.5 mm (range, 0.7 to 5.3 mm; standard deviation, 0.7 mm). Fifty-one percent of the subjects had nonmineralized atheroma and 91% had single or multiple mineralizations in any of the arterial segments imaged. Both mean maximal IMT and nonmineralized atheromas were associated significantly (P < .05) with the presence of cerebral atherosclerosis, carotid murmur, at least one nonpalpable peripheral arterial pulse, ischemic resting electrocardiographic abnormalities, and history of coronary heart disease but not with intermittent claudication at the 30-year follow-up. No significant associations were found between carotid mineralizations and clinical cardiovascular disease. Long-term elevations of serum cholesterol and long-term smoking, measured as the number of risk factor elevations in the six examinations, were associated with the presence of nonmineralized atheroma in the elderly (in 1989). Smoking and repeatedly detected hypertension, on the other hand, had an association with the presence of mineralizations in 1989.
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PMID:Ultrasonographic manifestations of common carotid atherosclerosis in elderly eastern Finnish men. Prevalence and associations with cardiovascular diseases and risk factors. 791 14


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