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Long- and short-term risk of sudden coronary death.
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1992
Year
Heart FailureSudden Coronary DeathPreventive CardiologyFramingham Heart StudyLogistic AnalysisCoronary Artery DiseaseProspective Cohort StudyPublic HealthCardiologyScd RateCardiovascular EpidemiologyHealth PolicyRiskCohort StudyCardiac CareSudden Cardiac DeathEpidemiologyCardiovascular Disease Risk AssessmentCoronary Heart DiseaseCardiovascular DiseaseCardiovascular Risk FactorsMedicineEmergency Medicine
The long- and short-term relation of risk factors to sudden cardiac death (SCD) is examined in the Framingham heart study of 2,011 men and 2,534 women aged 35-70 at the fourth biennial exam. Risk factor measurements over the first four biennial exams were averaged and analyzed as predictors of the long-term occurrence of SCD over the ensuing 28 years using Kaplan-Meier survival curves and the Cox proportional hazards method. The relation of risk factors to the short-term risk of SCD was examined by relating risk factors at each biennium to incidence over the ensuing 2 years, using pooled logistic regression analyses. Over the 28 years of follow-up, 171 men and 80 women experienced SCDs. Women had a lower incidence than men at all ages, and even after adjusting for known risk factors, their SCD rate was only 32% of that in men. In the short term, women have an SCD rate that is 23% of that in men. Most of the modifiable or constitutional risk factors, including glucose intolerance, systolic blood pressure, body mass index, and cigarette smoking have a greater long-term than short-term net effect. This is less apparent in women. Electrocardiographic abnormalities such as left ventricular hypertrophy, intraventricular block, and nonspecific repolarization abnormality were better short-term predictors. In men, preexisting coronary heart disease conferred a 3.3-fold (risk factor-adjusted) increased long-term risk of SCD and 5.3-fold increased short-term risk. In women, the long-term risk is 1.9 and short-term risk is 2.8.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)