Global Study Shows Nine
Factors That Identify 90% Of Heart Attack Risk
posted September 16, 2004
The vast majority of heart attacks
can be predicted by nine easily measurable factors, that are the same in every
region and ethnic group worldwide
The INTERHEART study looked at more than 29,000 people in 52 countries and from
all inhabited continents of the world. The study found that the two most
important risk factors are cigarette smoking and an abnormal ratio of blood
lipids (Apolipoprotein B/Apolipoprotein A-1), which together predicted
two-thirds of the global risk of heart attack. Additional risk factors are high
blood pressure, diabetes, abdominal obesity, stress, a lack of daily consumption
of fruits and vegetables and a lack of daily exercise. Regular consumption of
small amounts of alcohol was also found to be modestly protective. Worldwide,
these nine factors collectively predict more than 90 per cent of the risk of a
heart attack.
The INTERHEART study, one of the largest case control studies examining the
importance of heart disease risk factors, involved 15,152 individuals with their
first heart attack and 14,820 others who did not have heart disease but who were
of the same age, gender, and from the same city.
This major study is the first examination of whether risk factors for heart
attack have a similar or different impact in all major ethnic groups and major
areas of the world.
Yusuf said conventional wisdom had previously suggested that only half of the
risks of heart attacks may be foreseen, but the INTERHEART findings mean the
overwhelming majority of heart attack risk may be predicted.
"These risk factors appear to predict the majority of the risk in virtually
every region, every ethnic group, in men and women and in the old and the
young," said Yusuf. "This suggests that the message of preventing cardiovascular
disease can be quite simple and, generally, similar across the world, after
taking into account economic and cultural differences.
"Since these risk factors may all be modified, this is remarkable and will
change the way we look at heart attack prevention. It means we should be able to
prevent the majority of premature heart attacks in the world."
Dr. Alan Bernstein, president of the Canadian Institutes of Health Research,
pointed out that worldwide there is a growing epidemic of cardiovascular disease
with more than 15 million deaths from heart attacks in 1998 alone.
"This is a landmark study. It suggests that a combination of lifestyle changes
including stopping smoking, eating a healthier diet and exercising could lead to
an 80 per cent reduction in the risk of heart attacks," he said.
The INTERHEART study was endorsed by the World Health Organization, the World
Heart Federation, and the International Clinical Epidemiology Network. The study
was presented Aug 27th at the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) conference in
Munich, Germany by Dr. Salim Yusuf, a professor of medicine at the Michael G.
DeGroote School of Medicine at McMaster University and director of the
Population Health Research Institute at McMaster University and Hamilton Health
Sciences, which coordinated the study.
Source: Diabetes In Control.com:
The Lancet Sept.11, 2004.
September 2004
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