Title of article :
Blood pressure, cholesterol, and stroke in eastern Asia
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
7
From page :
1801
To page :
1807
Abstract :
Background Stroke is a major cause of death and disability in most populations of eastern Asia, and the incidence, particularly of haemorrhagic stroke, is generally higher than in western populations. This study aimed to assess the contributions of blood pressure and blood cholesterol concentrations to stroke risk in populations from eastern Asia. Methods The project included 13 cohorts from the Peopleʹs Republic of China and five from Japan (124774 participants, 837 214 person-years of observation). All 18 cohorts provided data on blood pressure and 12 (69767 participants) provided data on cholesterol concentrations. Parametric and non-parametric analyses were done, with adjustments for several potential confounding factors. Analyses were based on estimated usual diastolic blood pressure and cholesterol concentration during follow-up, rather than baseline measurements, to avoid regression dilution bias. Findings Overall mean blood pressure was 124/78 mm hg and mean cholesterol concentration was 4·5 mmol/L. 1798 strokes occurred; 751 (42%) were classified as haemorrhagic and 707 (39%) were confirmed by computed tomography or necropsy. Each 5 mm hg lower usual diastolic blood pressure was associated with lower risk of non-haemorrhagic stroke (odds ratio 0·61 [95% CI 0·57–0·66]) and lower risk of haemorrhagic stroke (0·54-[0·50–0·58]). With decreasing cholesterol concentrations there were trends towards a decrease in risk of nonhaemorrhagic stroke (odds ratio for 0·6 mmol/L decrease, 0·77 [0·57–1·06]) and an increase in risk of haemorrhagic stroke (1·27 [0·84–1·91]). Overall, there was no clear evidence of any interaction between cholesterol and diastolic blood pressure. Interpretation Blood pressure is an important determinant of stroke risk in eastern Asian populations, whereas cholesterol concentration is less important, affecting the proportions of stroke subtypes more than overall stroke numbers. The association between blood pressure and stroke seems stronger than in western populations; a population-wide reduction of 3 mm hg in diastolic blood pressure should eventually decrease the number of strokes by about a third.
Journal title :
The Lancet
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
The Lancet
Record number :
578984
Link To Document :
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