Title of article :
Glycaemia (haemoglobin A1c) and incident ischaemic stroke: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study
Author/Authors :
Elizabeth Selvin، نويسنده , , Josef Coresh، نويسنده , , Eyal Shahar، نويسنده , , Lin Zhang، نويسنده , , Michael Steffes، نويسنده , , A. Richey Sharrett، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Summary
Background
Individuals with diabetes have a raised risk of stroke, but it is unclear whether sustained hyperglycaemia contributes to the development of cerebrovascular disease. Haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), a measure of long-term glycaemia, is strongly related to retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy in diabetes. We sought to assess the association between HbA1c and stroke in people with and without diabetes.
Methods
10 886 participants without diabetes and 1635 participants with diabetes in the ARIC study, who did not have cardiovascular disease, were followed up for incident ischaemic stroke over 8–10 years. We assayed HbA1c for all 167 stroke cases and a sample of 680 non-cases in the adults without diabetes and for the full cohort of 1635 adults with diabetes (including 89 stroke cases). We assessed the relation between HbA1c concentrations (in tertiles specific for individuals with and without diabetes) and incident ischaemic stroke during follow-up using Cox proportional hazards models, controlling for risk factors for stroke.
Findings
The adjusted relative risks of stroke increased with increasing tertile of HbA1c in both adults without diabetes (p=0•02) and with diabetes (p<0•0001). Compared with adults without diabetes in the lowest tertile of HbA1c, the adjusted relative risks of stroke by HbA1c tertile were 1•18 (0•70–2•00) and 1•58 (0•94–2•66) in adults without diabetes and 1•75 (0•90–3•42), 2•29 (1•24–4•21), and 4•71 (2•69–8•25) in adults with diabetes.
Interpretation
Raised HbA1c could be an independent risk factor for stroke in people with and without diabetes, with relative risks similar to those previously reported for coronary heart disease.
Journal title :
Lancet Neurology
Journal title :
Lancet Neurology