A study on the incidence of cardiovascular disease on the metabolic syndrome in 11 provinces in China.
- Author:
Gui-xian WU
1
;
Zhao-su WU
;
Jing LIU
;
Wei WANG
;
Dong ZHAO
;
Lei HOU
;
Zhe-chun ZENG
;
Wen-hua WANG
;
Jun LIU
;
Lan-ping QIN
;
Sa LIU
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adult; Body Mass Index; China; epidemiology; Cohort Studies; Coronary Disease; epidemiology; etiology; Female; Humans; Incidence; Male; Metabolic Syndrome; complications; epidemiology; Middle Aged; Proportional Hazards Models; Risk Factors; Smoking; adverse effects; Stroke; epidemiology; etiology
- From: Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2003;24(7):551-553
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo explore the association of metabolic syndrome with CVD in a cohort study involving 11 provinces.
METHODSA cohort study was carried out in a population of 27 739 subjects (age 35 - 64 years). A baseline survey on the risk factor of cardiovascular disease was done in 1992. Incidence rate and relative risk were calculated for metabolic syndromes.
RESULTS(1) The age-standardized incidence rate of cardiovascular disease for metabolic syndromes (MS) was higher than those without (MS) in this cohort (MS 652.3/100,000, not MS 206.7/100,000, RR = 3.12, P < 0.001). (2) The incidence rate of cardiovascular disease for patients with hypertension but low HDL cholesterol and high waist was the highest (910.2/100,000 in man, 930.7/100,000 in woman) among all metabolic syndromes patients. (3) The predictive risk factors for cardiovascular disease were age, cigarette smoking, BMI, total cholesterol and metabolic syndrome in men, with age, BMI and metabolic syndrome in women.
CONCLUSIONThe incidence rate of cardiovascular disease on the metabolic syndrome was high in 11 provinces in China. Age, BMI and metabolic syndrome were the predictive risk factors of cardiovascular disease (especially of cerebrovascular disease). It is essential to prevent risk factors of cardiovascular disease in primary and secondary prevention programs in general population.