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Heart Disease Deaths Decline in U.S.

来源:www.webmd.com
摘要:May8,2006--Thegoodnews:heartdiseaseheartdiseasedeathsaredownintheU。heartdiseaseisstillaleadingcauseofdeathformenandwomenalike。ButastudyinthejournalCirculationshowsthatwomenandelderlypeoplemaybemorelikelytodieofheartproblemsthanother......

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May 8, 2006 -- The good news: heart diseaseheart disease deaths are down in the U.S. The fine print: that decline is softer in some groups -- especially women and the elderly -- than others.

Make no mistake; heart disease is still a leading cause of death for men and women alike. But a study in the journal Circulation shows that women and elderly people may be more likely to die of heart problems than others.

The study tracked cardiovascular disease in Olmsted County, Minn., from 1979 to 2003. The biggest town in Olmsted County is Rochester, Minn., where the Mayo Clinic is located.

Mayo Clinic researchers including Yariv Gerber, PhD, got their data from Olmsted County's death certificates. They focused on coronary heart disease, other heart diseases, and noncardiac diseases of the circulatory system, using the term "cardiovascular disease" (CVD) for the grand total of all of those deaths.

Study's Findings

From 1979 to 2003, 6,378 Olmsted County residents aged 25 and older died of CVD. Their causes of death are as follows:

Overall, the county's CVD deaths dropped by half from 1979 to 2003. But the declines were a bit uneven. The details:

Out-of-hospital deaths included deaths occurring in emergency rooms as well as people who were declared dead on arrival at a hospital.

Coronary heart disease remained the leading cause of CVD death during the years that were studied despite declining by 3.3% per year, the study shows.

However, other types of CVD death showed slower annual declines (2.1% for other heart diseases such as heart failureheart failure and 2.4% for noncardiac circulatory system diseases such as strokestroke).

The overall drop in CVD deaths is "encouraging," the researchers write. They call for these steps:

Olmsted County is mainly white, but the findings seem in line with other national studies, write Gerber and colleagues.


SOURCES: Gerber, Y. Circulation, May 16, 2006; vol 113. News release, American Heart Association.

作者: MirandaHitti 2006-7-4
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