Background and Purpose-B-mode ultrasound is a noninvasive method of examining the walls of peripheral arteries and provides measures of the intima-media thickness (IMT) at various sites (common carotid artery, bifurcation, internal carotid artery) and of plaques that may indicate early presymptomatic disease. The reported associations between cardiovascular risk factors, clinical disease, IMT, and plaques are inconsistent. We sought to clarify these relationships in a large, representative sample of men and women living in 2 British towns. Methods-The study was performed during 1996 in 2 towns (Dewsbury and Maidstone) of the British Regional Heart Study that have an Ϸ2-fold difference in coronary heart disease risk. The male participants were drawn from the British Regional Heart Study and were recruited in 1978 -1980 and form part of a national cohort study of 7735 men. A random sample of women of similar age to the men (55 to 77 years) was also selected from the age-sex register of the general practices used in the original survey. A wide range of data on social, lifestyle, and physiological factors, cardiovascular disease symptoms, and diagnoses was collected. Measures of right and left common carotid IMT (IMT cca ) and bifurcation IMT (IMT bif ) were made, and the arteries were examined for plaques 1.5 cm above and below the flow divider. Results-Totals of 425 men and 375 women were surveyed (mean age, 66 years; range, 56 to 77 years). The mean (SD) IMT cca observed were 0.84 (0.21) and 0.75 (0.16) mm for men and women, respectively. The mean (SD) IMT bif were 1.69 (0.61) and 1.50 (0.77) mm for men and women, respectively. The correlation between IMT cca and IMT bif was similar in men (rϭ0.36) and women (rϭ0.38). There were no differences in mean IMT cca or IMT bif between the 2 towns. Carotid plaques were very common, affecting 57% (nϭ239) of men and 58% (nϭ211) of women. Severe carotid plaques with flow disturbance were rare, affecting 9 men (2%) and 6 women (1.6%). Plaques increased in prevalence with age, affecting 49% men and 39% of women aged Ͻ60 years and 65% and 75% of men and women, respectively, aged Ͼ70 years. Plaques were most common among men in Dewsbury (79% affected) and least common among men in Maidstone (34% affected). IMT cca showed a different pattern of association with cardiovascular risk factors from IMT bif and was associated with age, SBP, and FEV 1 but not with social, lifestyle, or other physiological risk factors. IMT bif and carotid plaques were associated with smoking, manual social class, and plasma fibrinogen. IMT bif and carotid plaques were associated with symptoms and diagnoses of cardiovascular diseases. IMT bif associations with cardiovascular risk factors and prevalent cardiovascular disease appeared to be explained by the presence of plaques in regression models and in analyses stratified by plaque status. Conclusions-IMT cca , IMT bif , and plaque are correlated with each other but show differing patterns of association with risk factors and prevalent disease. IMT cca ...
The association of serum levels of gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) with cardiovascular disease risk factors, and with mortality from all causes, cardiovascular disease, and non-cardiovascular diseases, has been examined in a prospective study of 7,613 middle-aged British men followed for 11.5 years. GGT levels were strongly associated with all-cause mortality, largely due to a significant increase in deaths from ischemic heart disease and other non-cardiovascular disease causes, i.e., non-cancer deaths, in the top quintile of the GGT distribution. No association was seen with cancer mortality. However, GGT was significantly (positively) associated with alcohol intake, body mass index, smoking, preexisting ischemic heart disease, diabetes mellitus, antihypertensive medication, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, total and high density lipoprotein cholesterol, heart rate, and blood glucose, and negatively associated with physical activity and lung function (forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1)). After adjustment for these personal characteristics and biologic variables, elevated GGT (highest quintile > or = 24 unit/liter vs. the rest) was still associated with a significant increase in mortality from all causes (relative risk (RR) = 1.22, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01-1.42; n = 818 deaths) and from ischemic heart disease (RR = 1.42, 95% CI 1.12-1.80; n = 332 deaths). The increase in other non-cardiovascular disease causes was of marginal significance (RR = 1.45, 95% CI 0.95-2.20; n = 127 deaths). When examined separately by the presence or absence of preexisting ischemic heart disease, the increased risk of ischemic heart disease mortality was more marked in those with evidence of ischemic heart disease at screening, particularly in those with previous myocardial infarction (RR = 1.67, 95% CI 1.03-2.69; n = 84 deaths). The increased risk of other non-cardiovascular disease deaths was only seen in men without preexisting ischemic heart disease, largely due to an excess of hepatic cirrhosis. In summary, many factors other than alcohol intake are associated with increased levels of GGT, in particular body mass index, diabetes mellitus, and serum total cholesterol. The finding of increased risk of ischemic heart disease mortality seen in men with preexisting ischemic heart disease is related to the severity of the underlying myocardial damage. The biologic significance of raised GGT in men with preexisting ischemic heart disease merits further study.
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