02383nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001100001100042700001200053700001300065700001300078700001700091700001800108700003800126700001100164700001300175700001500188245011500203250001500318300001200333490000700345520174300352020004602095 2009 d1 aLiu L.1 aWang X.1 aIslam S.1 aJiang L.1 aSanderson J.1 aRangarajan S.1 aINTERHEART Investigators in China1 aTeo K.1 aYusuf S.1 aChow Clara00aPotentially modifiable risk factors associated with myocardial infarction in China: the INTERHEART China study a2009/06/02 a1857-640 v953 a

BACKGROUND: Lifestyle changes associated with the rapidly developing economy increase cardiovascular disease (CVD), myocardial infarction (MI) and cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) in China. OBJECTIVE: To assess and compare regionally, and with other regions of the world, distribution of the nine INTERHEART CVRFs, their relationship to MI and the CVD epidemic in China in order to determine how this may influence the future of CVD in China. METHODS: Patients with first acute MI (n = 3030) and age- and sex-matched controls (n = 3056) were enrolled from 26 centres in China. RESULTS: Northern Chinese had higher rates of smoking and hypertension, whereas southern Chinese reported lower fruit and vegetable intake and higher rates of depression. Compared with other regions, participants from China were older, with lower body mass index and waist to hip ratios, lower total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels, ApoB lipoprotein and ApoB to ApoA-1 ratios, but higher high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and ApoA-1. All nine INTERHEART CVRFs, education and income were significantly associated with MI in the Chinese cohort. There was significant heterogeneity in the strength of association between certain CVRFs and MI for China versus other regions, with stronger associations for the Chinese for diabetes (OR 5.10 vs 2.84), depression (2.27 vs 1.37) and permanent stress (2.67 vs 2.06); and lower for the Chinese for abdominal obesity (1.33 vs 2.62) (p for heterogeneity, all <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes and psychosocial factors have strong associations with risk of MI in China, indicating that future increases in these risk factors with societal change in China may hasten rapid increases in CVD.

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