Clusters of metabolic risk factors predict cardiovascular events in hypertension with target-organ damage: the LIFE study

被引:0
作者
G de Simone
M H Olsen
K Wachtell
D A Hille
B Dahlöf
H Ibsen
S E Kjeldsen
P A Lyle
R B Devereux
机构
[1] Federico II University of Naples,The Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine
[2] Weill Medical College of Cornell University,Division of Cardiology
[3] Glostrup University Hospital,Department of Medicine
[4] Rigshospitalet,Department of Cardiology
[5] Merck Research Laboratories,Department of Medicine
[6] Sahlgrenska University Hospital/Östra,undefined
[7] University of Oslo Ullevaal Hospital,undefined
来源
Journal of Human Hypertension | 2007年 / 21卷
关键词
cardiovascular risk; left ventricular hypertrophy; metabolic syndrome;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The relation of metabolic syndrome (MetS) with cardiovascular outcome may be less evident when preclinical cardiovascular disease is present. We explored, in a post hoc analysis, whether MetS predicts cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients with electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (ECG-LVH) in the Losartan Intervention For Endpoint (LIFE) reduction in hypertension study. MetS was defined by ⩾2 risk factors plus hypertension: body mass index ⩾30 kg/m2, high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol <1.0/1.3 mmol/l (<40/50 mg/dl) (men/women), glucose ⩾6.1 mmol/l (⩾110 mg/dl) fasting or ⩾7.8 mmol/l (⩾140 mg/dl) nonfasting or diabetes. Cardiovascular death and the primary composite end point (CEP) of cardiovascular death, stroke and myocardial infarction were examined. In MetS (1591 (19.3%) of 8243 eligible patients), low HDL-cholesterol (72%), obesity (77%) and impaired glucose (73%) were similarly prevalent, with higher blood pressure, serum creatinine and Cornell product, but lower Sokolow–Lyon voltage (all P<0.001). After adjusting for baseline covariates, hazard ratios for CEPs and cardiovascular death (4.8±1.1 years follow-up) were 1.47 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.27–1.71)- and 1.73 (95% CI, 1.38–2.17)-fold higher with MetS (both P<0.0001), and were only marginally reduced when further adjusted for diabetes, obesity, low HDL-cholesterol, non-HDL-cholesterol, pulse pressure and in-treatment systolic blood pressure and heart rate. Thus, MetS is associated with increased cardiovascular events in hypertensive patients with ECG-LVH, independently of single cardiovascular risk factors.
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页码:625 / 632
页数:7
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