RISK FACTORS FOR FATAL HEART ATTACK IN YOUNG WOMEN

Publication Description
Deaths of 338 women at ages 15-44 years attributed to myocardial infarction (MI) on death certificates during an 18-month period in five metropolitan areas were investigated. Evidence of recent MI or evidence that death occurred suddenly was obtained for about half (163) from records of hospitals or medical examiners or from relatives. A case-control study (involving one deceased control, and one hospitalized living control) of risk factors for heart attack was then conducted using interviews with relatives and abstracts of records of hospitals and physicians identified by the relatives as sources of medical care. Information was obtained on history of prior MI, other heart disease, diabetes, thromboembolism, stroke, hypertension, high cholesterol, obesity, oophorectomy, oral contraception and cigarette smoking. Data are presented on the prevalence of these potential risk factors for the case group and each control group, and for subsets of cases consisting of those without prior heart disease, definite MI only, sudden death only, and white women only. Multivariate analyses identify somewhat different sets of risk factors and different levels of risk for the various subgroups. In general, the risk factors are those that have been reported for men, despite the major difference in level of mortality.

Primary Author
Krueger,D. E.
Ellenberg,S. S.
Bloom,S.
Calkins,B. M.
Jacyna,R.
Nolan,D. C.
Phillips,R.
Rios,J. C.
Sobieski,R.
Shekelle,R. B.
Spector,K. M.
Stadel,B. V.
Stolley,P. D.
Terris,M.

Volume
113

Issue
4

Start Page
357

Other Pages
370

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7211821

PMID
7211821



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
American journal of epidemiology

Publication Year
1981

Publication Date
Apr

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0002-9262

Document Object Index
10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a113104