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Body mass index (BMI) was studied for its prediction of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) among 31,000 adult participants in the health examination survey of the Social Insurance Institution of Finland. Mortality, morbidity, and premature work disability from CVD of the participants has been followed up for an average of 10 years by record linkage to the national mortality, hospital discharge, and work invalidity pension registers. The risk of disability and morbidity from CVD increased linearly with BMI, but mortality was only weakly related to BMI. After adjustment for age, smoking, and occupation, the relative risks of work disability, morbidity, and mortality from CVD for women with BMI greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2 were, respectively, 2.6 (95% confidence interval = 1.8-3.8), 1.9 (1.4-2.3) and 1.4 (0.7-2.7), compared with the risks for women with BMI less than 22.5 kg/m2. The corresponding risks for men were 2.0 (1.5-2.5), 1.8 (1.5-2.1), and 1.4 (1.0-1.8), respectively. The high risks were largely due to an excess of CVD other than myocardial infarction and stroke. Because of the associated nonfatal morbidity and disability, overweight remains a major preventable risk factor of CVD. CVD in the obese may have a lower than average fatality rate.
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PMID:Is the burden of overweight on cardiovascular health underestimated? 228 31

We examined the incidence of nonfatal and fatal coronary heart disease in relation to obesity in a prospective cohort study of 115,886 U.S. women who were 30 to 55 years of age in 1976 and free of diagnosed coronary disease, stroke, and cancer. During eight years of follow-up (775,430 person-years), we identified 605 first coronary events, including 306 nonfatal myocardial infarctions, 83 deaths due to coronary heart disease, and 216 cases of confirmed angina pectoris. A higher Quetelet index (weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters) was positively associated with the occurrence of each category of coronary heart disease. For increasing levels of current Quetelet index (less than 21, 21 to less than 23, 23 to less than 25, 25 to less than 29, and greater than or equal to 29), the relative risks of nonfatal myocardial infarction and fatal coronary heart disease combined, as adjusted for age and cigarette smoking, were 1.0, 1.3, 1.3, 1.8, and 3.3 (Mantel-extension chi for trend = 7.29; P less than 0.00001). As expected, control for a history of hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolemia--conditions known to be biologic effects of obesity--attenuated the strength of the association. The current Quetelet index was a more important determinant of coronary risk than that at the age of 18; an intervening weight gain increased risk substantially. These prospective data emphasize the importance of obesity as a determinant of coronary heart disease in women. After control for cigarette smoking, which is essential to assess the true effects of obesity, even mild-to-moderate overweight increased the risk of coronary disease in middle-aged women.
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PMID:A prospective study of obesity and risk of coronary heart disease in women. 231 26

The Tecumseh project investigates the evolution of hypertension in a healthy population. Of 946 subjects aged 18 through 38 years, 124 had clinic blood pressure readings higher than 140/90 mm Hg (the mean for borderline hypertensive subjects was 130/94 mm Hg). Compared with normotensive subjects, borderline hypertensive subjects had higher home blood pressures (mean, 12/7 mm Hg higher). Their childhood and postpubertal blood pressures were elevated (6/4 mm Hg higher than normal at age 6 years and 12/7 mm Hg higher than normal at age 21 years), and hypertensive target organ changes were detected. Borderline hypertensive subjects also had elevated minimal forearm resistance (0.22 U higher than normal), decreased stroke index (1.8 mL/m2 lower than normal), and impaired ventricular diastolic relaxation (mitral Doppler peak early diastolic blood flow [E] to peak late diastolic blood flow [A] ratio 0.13 lower than normal). Borderline hypertensive subjects had significant abnormalities in other coronary risk factors (cholesterol levels were 0.39 mmol/L higher, triglyceride levels were 0.45 mmol/L higher, high-density lipoprotein levels were 0.08 mmol/L lower, insulin levels were 38 pmol/L higher, and 16.5% more of them were overweight). Borderline hypertension is neither transient nor innocuous. Its association with other predictors of atherosclerosis calls for clinical attention.
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PMID:The association of borderline hypertension with target organ changes and higher coronary risk. Tecumseh Blood Pressure study. 236 31

This paper examines the level of cardiovascular risk knowledge in the general population and the relationship between such knowledge and behavior. The following questions are addressed: (1) How informed is the general population about what persons can do to reduce their risk of cardiovascular disease? (2) How do sociodemographic factors, self-perceptions of health, and cardiovascular risk factors relate to knowledge? (3) Is there a relationship between knowledge and behavior? (4) What might explain apparent inconsistencies between knowledge and behavior? The data used in this paper derive from a random sample of 732 men and women form the greater Boston area. We assessed cardiovascular risk factor knowledge by asking respondents what specific steps a person could take to make a heart attack or stroke less likely. Risk factors (including physiological measures), sociodemographic factors, and self-perceptions of health also were measured. Results showed that respondents were most knowledgeable about the relationships of exercise and cholesterol to heart disease. Knowledge was related positively to education, being female, and exercising. When we compared knowledge with behavior, results showed that for smokers and those who were overweight, risk was related to awareness, thus suggesting that knowledge does not lead necessarily to risk-reducing behavior. Implications of these results in terms of education and prevention are discussed.
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PMID:Is cardiovascular risk factor knowledge sufficient to influence behavior? 239 37

A cohort of 427 (171 males, 256 females) elderly Chinese aged 60 years and over whose health status had been defined in a previous survey was reexamined after a 30-month period to determine the occurrence of stroke. Subjects who initially had a history of transient ischemic attacks (TIA) and nonrheumatic atrial fibrillation had a greater than 10-fold increased risk of stroke in the subsequent 30 months. Men, smokers, alcohol drinkers, overweight subjects, and diabetics, also had a relative risk greater than one, but this did not reach statistical significance. Hypertensive subjects did not have an increased risk of stroke. It is concluded that the most important risk factors in the elderly predisposing to stroke in the short-term are a history of TIA and atrial fibrillation. Preventive measures against these two conditions may have a greater short-term impact in the elderly in reducing stroke occurrence than modification of other risk factors. Further studies involving larger numbers are needed to confirm these findings.
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PMID:Risk factors predisposing to stroke in an elderly Chinese population--a longitudinal study. 240 23

Great individual variability exists in the ability to sustain heat stress. Some individuals are more susceptible to heat than others. Those individuals, among the young active population (athletes, military recruits, laborers), are at risk to contract exertional heat stroke. Low tolerance to heat results from either functional factors, or from congenital or acquired disturbances. In most cases heat intolerance can be foreseen. Cases of dehydration, overweight, low physical fitness, lack of acclimatization, febrile or infectious diseases, and skin disorders should be regarded a priori as predisposing factors for heat intolerance. Special attention should be paid to subjects with previous heat stroke episodes since it might reflect an underlying cause for heat susceptibility. The heat tolerance of these subjects should be tested 8-12 wk postepisode to detect a possible residual injury in the ability to thermoregulate adequately in the heat.
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PMID:Heat intolerance: predisposing factor or residual injury? 240 44

For the characterization of the left-ventricular thickness of the wall, of the diameter and of the functional parameters in obesity in a short-term investigation on 18 extremely adipose female normotonics and 17 normotonics with normal weight the echocardiographic investigation in the M-mode in the short parasternal axis was performed. The women with overweight had a by 28% (p less than 0.001) greater fractional shortening, a by 8% (p less than 0.01) greater ejection fraction, a by 23% (p less than 0.05) greater stroke volume and a by 34% (p less than 0.001) greater cardiac output as well as a by 13% smaller left-ventricular end-systolic volume than normotonic women with normal weight. Index of stroke volume and cardiac output did not differ. The women with overweight had a significantly larger left-ventricular end-diastolic diameter and a thicker interventricular septum as well as a larger thickness of the left-ventricular posterior wall in the systole. The results allowed the conclusion that changed left-ventricular parameters both with regard to the form and to the function in obesity per se might be the expression of the physiological adaptation to an increased requirement and the borderlines to the transition into a disturbed left-ventricular function and development of a left-ventricular hypertrophy were not fixed. Long-term studies should bring further explanation concerning these problems.
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PMID:[The relation of anthropometric parameters and echocardiography findings in the evaluation of left ventricular form and function in extreme obesity]. 252 19

Most diabetic patients are elderly but their clinical characteristics remain poorly defined. A population survey identified 259 known diabetic patients aged 60 years or more giving a prevalence of 3% in this age group. A total of 193 patients (75%) were interviewed and examined, 155 (80%) of whom had been diagnosed at under 70 years of age. Forty-two patients (22%) were insulin-treated but clinical characteristics suggested that at least 95% of all elderly patients had Type 2 diabetes. Blood glucose control was poor with median HbA1 9.7% (range 4.9-17.1%, normal reference range 5.0-7.5%), and 55% were either overweight or obese. There was a high morbidity from diabetes and other conditions: the prevalence of hypertension (untreated blood pressure of 160/95 mmHg or more or antihypertensive medication) was 52%, of stroke 5%, of nephropathy (urinary albumin concentration greater than or equal to 300 mg l-1) 3%, of lower limb amputations 4%, and of foot ulcers 7%. The prevalence of symmetrically impaired distal vibration perception was 23%, and 54% of patients either needed or were receiving chiropody. The prevalence of a corrected distant visual acuity of 6/12 or worse was 32% and of retinopathy of any degree was 26%. There was extensive co-morbidity which was not confined to a single subgroup of patients.
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PMID:Diabetes in the elderly: the Oxford Community Diabetes Study. 252 2

Hypertension and obesity are 2 common pathological conditions that have been directly related. The incidence of hypertension in an obese population is far greater than in otherwise normal people. Nevertheless, a causal relationship between the 2 disorders has not been established. But their coincidence in the same patient carries increased risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. In the present study we have studied a group of normotensive obese patients (21 patients, Group A), a group of hypertensive obese patients (19 patients, Group B) and a group of normal subjects (11 patients, Group C) by radionuclide ventriculography with Tc 99m to visualize the different hemodynamic adaptation to these different conditions. Overweight causes an increased preload while hypertension causes an increased afterload. In response to the increase in preload the heart of obese patient undergoes eccentric hypertrophy; when an increase in afterload is present at the same time, the left ventricle develops concentric hypertrophy. We found an increased preload in both the obese groups (A and B) testified by increased blood volume and end diastolic volume. Heart rate was higher in the 2 populations of obese patients. As a result, cardiac output was significantly increased in Group A and B. But the stroke index is decreased in Group A and B with respect to Group C. The ejection fraction is reduced in Group A with respect to Group B and C. The contractility index (systolic blood pressure/end systolic volume) is higher in Group B in comparison with Group A. Thus, hypertensive obese patients seem to have a better cardiac performance respect to the normotensive obese patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Hemodynamic adaptation in severe obesity with or without arterial hypertension]. 263 90

Whereas up to the end of the last century overweight reflected the privilege of the high society and her relative good health, the recent epidemiological studies have assessed the relations between body weight and general or cause specific morbidity and mortality. The major diseases associated with obesity are hypertension, atherosclerosis and diabetes, as well as certain types of cancer. Less well known complications include hepatic steatosis, gallbladder diseases, pulmonary function impairment, endocrine abnormalities, obstetric complications, trauma to the weight bearing joints, gout, cutaneous diseases, proteinuria, increased hemoglobin concentration and possibly immunologic impairments. From these wide epidemiological studies arise the definition of obesity: with an excess of 20% beyond the desirable weight, the complications bound to the overweight become statistically more frequent. Over there a U or J shaped curve illustrates the relation between the overweight and the degree of these various complications. An excess of 45 kg or more represents the critical level which defined "morbid obesity" with its own complications, the most important are sudden unexplained death, ventilatory disorders, circulatory congestion and functional limitations in activities of daily living and of course psychological consequences. When for certain complications, such as diabetes, the relationship with the overweight is evident, discrepancies between certain studies, especially for the cardiovascular diseases, had focused the attention on the regional patterns of fat distribution. Cross-sectional studies have shown abdominal obesity to be strongly associated with risk factors for cardiovascular disease, stroke and death independent of the total degree of obesity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The contribution of epidemiology to the definition of obesity and its risk factors]. 266 68


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