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Stroke - References

Stroke 1999 Aug;30(8):1501-5

Race/ethnicity and location of stroke mortality: implications for population-based studies.

Wein TH, Smith MA, Morgenstern LB

Stroke Program, Department of Neurology, The University of Texas, Houston, USA.

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stroke community surveillance projects often focus on hospital data rates. We hypothesized that not including strokes which occurred in nursing homes or at home would differentially affect race/ethnic stroke rates. METHODS: Texas vital statistics data were studied to compare age-specific (45 to 59, 60 to 74, and >/=75 years) location of stroke death for African Americans (AAs), Hispanic Americans (HAs), and non-Hispanic whites (NHWs). Rate ratios are reported with 95% CIs; NHW is used as the referent group. RESULTS: During 1991 to 1996, there were 52 996 stroke deaths in Texas for individuals aged 45 years and older. HAs in the oldest age group (>/=75 years) were 33% more likely than NHWs to die in the hospital, and HAs aged 45 to 59 and 60 to 74 years were 4% and 10%, respectively, more likely to die in the hospital. AAs aged >/=75 years were 19% more likely to die in the hospital. HAs aged 60 to 74 years were 35% less likely to die in a nursing home, whereas HAs aged >/=75 years were 43% less likely than NHWs to die in a nursing home. AAs aged >/=75 were 33% less likely to die in a nursing home. Death at home was 19% more likely in HAs aged 60 to 74 years. Significant gender differences are also reported. CONCLUSIONS: Using hospital data alone would overestimate stroke mortality in the HA and AA groups. Stroke community surveillance projects should account for ethnic and gender differences in location of death to avoid bias in race/ethnic and gender comparisons.

PMID: 10436090, UI: 99365432


Coron Artery Dis 1999 Jul;10(5):343-6

Diabetes mellitus in older African-Americans, Hispanics, and whites in an academic hospital-based geriatrics practice.

Ness J, Nassimiha D, Feria MI, Aronow WS

Department of Geriatrics and Adult Development, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, New York, USA.

[Medline record in process]

BACKGROUND: Diabetes mellitus is a risk factor for target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease in older persons. DESIGN: A retrospective analysis was performed of charts from all older persons (506 men and 1497 women, mean age 80 +/- 8 years) seen during the period from 1 January 1998 to October 1998 at an academic hospital-based geriatrics practice, to investigate the prevalence of diabetes mellitus, and the prevalence, in patients with diabetes, of target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease, hypertension, hypertension or dyslipidaemia, obesity, the drugs used to treat diabetes, and poor glycaemic control. RESULTS: Diabetes mellitus occurred in 127 of 1150 whites (11%), in 93 of 444 African-Americans (21%), in 111 of 381 Hispanics (29%), and in four of 28 Asians (14%) (P < 0.001 comparing Hispanics with whites and comparing African-Americans with whites; P < 0.01 comparing Hispanics with African-Americans). Of 335 patients with diabetes, 146 (44%) had coronary disease, 94 (28%) had stroke or transient cerebral ischaemic attack, 86 (26%) had peripheral arterial disease, 65 (19%) had heart failure, 107 (32%) had nephropathy, 71 (21%) had retinopathy, 47 (14%) had neuropathy, 284 (85%) had target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease, 252 (75%) had hypertension, 300 (90%) had hypertension or dyslipidaemia, and 152 (45%) had obesity. The prevalence of stroke or transient cerebral ischaemic attack was greater in older African-Americans with diabetes mellitus than in older whites with diabetes mellitus (P < 0.02). The prevalence of diabetic nephropathy and of target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease was greater in older African-Americans with diabetes mellitus than in older whites (P < 0.02) and Hispanics (P < 0.05) with diabetes mellitus. Increased concentrations of glycosylated haemoglobin (> 7%) occurred in 28 of 86 African-Americans (33%), in 69 of 104 Hispanics (66%), and in 23 of 118 whites (19%) (P < 0.001 comparing Hispanics with whites and comparing Hispanics with African-Americans; P < 0.05 comparing African-Americans with whites). CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of diabetes mellitus in 2003 older persons seen in an academic hospital-based geriatrics practice was 17% and was greater in Hispanics than in whites or African-Americans, and greater in African-Americans than in whites. The prevalence of target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease was 85% in 335 older patients with diabetes. The prevalence of stroke or transient cerebral ischaemic attack was greater in older African-Americans with diabetes mellitus than in older whites with the disorder. The prevalence of diabetic nephropathy and of target-organ damage/clinical cardiovascular disease was greater in older African-Americans with diabetes mellitus than in older whites and Hispanics with diabetes mellitus. The prevalence of poor glycaemic control was greater in Hispanics than in whites or African-Americans and greater in African-Americans than in whites.

PMID: 10421976, UI: 99350876


J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 1999 Jun;54(6):M299-303

Prevalence and severity of urinary incontinence in older African American and Caucasian women.

Fultz NH, Herzog AR, Raghunathan TE, Wallace RB, Diokno AC

Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48106-1248, USA. nfultz@umich.edu

BACKGROUND: Few studies have investigated the prevalence and severity of urinary incontinence in older African American women. Comparisons of findings with those for older Caucasian women could provide important clues to the etiology of urinary incontinence and be used in planning screening programs and treatment services. METHODS: Data are from the first wave of the Asset and Health Dynamics Among the Oldest Old (AHEAD) study. A nationally representative sample of noninstitutionalized adults 70 years of age and older was interviewed. African Americans were oversampled to ensure that there would be enough minority respondents to compare findings across racial groups. RESULTS: A statistically significant relationship was found between race and urinary incontinence in the previous year: 23.02% of the Caucasian women reported incontinence, compared with 16.17% of the African American women. Other factors that appear to increase the likelihood of incontinence include education, age, functional impairment, sensory impairment, stroke, body mass, and reporting by a proxy. Race was not related to the severity (as measured by frequency) of urine loss among incontinent older women. CONCLUSION: This study identifies or confirms important risk factors for self-reported urinary incontinence in a national context, and suggests factors leading to protection from incontinence. Race is found to relate to incontinence, with older African American women reporting a lower prevalence.

PMID: 10411017, UI: 99336798


Hypertension 1999 Jul;34(1):57-62

Impact of nativity and race on "Stroke Belt" mortality.

Lackland DT, Egan BM, Jones PJ

Department of Biometry and Epidemiology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA. LACKLAND@MUSC.EDU

The southeastern region of the United States has been recognized for 6 decades as an area of excess cerebrovascular mortality rates. While the reasons for the disease variation remain an enigma, South Carolina has consistently been the forerunner of the "Stroke Belt." To determine the effects of nativity (birthplace) on stroke mortality rates in South Carolina, proportional mortality ratios (PMRs) were calculated for stroke deaths in South Carolina during 1980-1996 according to birthplace and stratified by gender, race, age, and educational status. The analyses revealed a graded risk of stroke by birthplace, with the highest PMRs (95% CI) among individuals born in South Carolina (104.8 [103.4 to 106.3]), intermediate PMRs in those born in the Southeast other than South Carolina (92.5 [90.2 to 94.9]), and lowest PMRs for those born outside the Southeast (77.4 [74.9 to 80.1]). The lower stroke PMRs for individuals born outside the Southeast were more striking in blacks (51.8 [45.2 to 59.3]) than in whites (84.9 [82.0 to 88.0]) and for men (73.3 [69.5 to 77.3]) than women (83.5 [79.9 to 87.3]). The findings, particularly in blacks, were not explainable by gender, differences in age, and/or markers of educational and socioeconomic status. These findings suggest that nativity is a significant risk marker for the geographic variation in stroke mortality. Moreover, the regional disparities for nativity and subsequent stroke mortality appear to be greater in blacks than in whites and for men than for women. An understanding of factors linking birthplace to risk for cerebrovascular mortality could facilitate efforts directed at stroke prevention.

PMID: 10406824, UI: 99335706


Stroke 1999 Jul;30(7):1350-6

Race, presenting signs and symptoms, use of carotid artery imaging, and appropriateness of carotid endarterectomy.

Oddone EZ, Horner RD, Sloane R, McIntyre L, Ward A, Whittle J, Passman LJ, Kroupa L, Heaney R, Diem S, Matchar D

Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA. oddonOO1@mc.duke.edu

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We sought to determine whether there are racial differences in use of carotid artery imaging after controlling for clinical factors and to ascertain racial differences in presenting signs and symptoms and overall appropriateness for carotid endarterectomy (CE). METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study of 803 patients older than 45 years, hospitalized between 1991 and 1994 at any of 4 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers, with a discharge diagnosis of transient ischemic attack or ischemic stroke. Clinical data were abstracted from the medical record, including presenting symptoms, diagnostic test results, and use of surgical procedures. Appropriateness for CE was determined according to RAND criteria. RESULTS: Black patients were more likely than white patients to present with stroke (78% versus 55%) but less likely to present with transient ischemic attack (22% versus 45%; P=0.001). There was no racial difference in medical comorbidity or preoperative risk. Black patients were less likely to have an imaging study of their carotid arteries (67% versus 79%; P=0.001). Race remained an independent predictor of imaging after adjustment for clinical factors (odds ratio=1.50; 95% CI, 1.06 to 2.13). Because of higher prevalence of significant carotid artery stenosis, whites were significantly more likely than blacks to be assessed as appropriate candidates for surgery with the use of RAND criteria (18% versus 4%; P=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Use of carotid artery imaging, a critical step in determining eligibility for CE, is influenced by the patient's race after controlling for clinical presentation. Adjustment for appropriateness of CE reduces but does not eliminate the importance of race.

PMID: 10390306, UI: 99319097


J Neurol Sci 1999 Mar 1;163(2):137-9

Activated protein C resistance in young African American patients with ischemic stroke.

Chaturvedi S, Joshi N, Dzieczkowski J

Department of Neurology, Wayne State University/Detroit Medical Center, MI 48201, USA. schaturv@med.wayne.edu

BACKGROUND: It has been proposed that activated protein C resistance (APCR) due to the factor V Leiden (FVL) mutation may be a risk factor for stroke in young adults. However, this may not be the case for all ethnic groups due to variability in the prevalence of the FVL mutation. METHODS: Case series from a university neurology clinic. Patients with an APCR ratio of 2.2 or below were tested for the FVL mutation (nine patients). Patients on warfarin were also tested for the FVL mutation (14 patients). RESULTS: 38 African American patients under age 55 with an arterial stroke were identified. The mean age of the patients is 43.1 years. Five percent had an APCR ratio of 2.0 or below. None of the patients with an APCR ratio of 2.2 or below or the patients directly tested for the FVL mutation had the mutant allele. CONCLUSIONS: Activated protein C resistance due to the FVL mutation does not appear to be a major risk factor for stroke in young African Americans. Other, as yet unidentified, mechanisms leading to activated protein C resistance may be important in a small subset of young African American stroke patients.

PMID: 10371074, UI: 99297484


J Clin Epidemiol 1999 May;52(5):441-6

Symptoms of Raynaud's phenomenon in an inner-city African-American community: prevalence and self-reported cardiovascular comorbidity.

Gelber AC, Wigley FM, Stallings RY, Bone LR, Barker AV, Baylor I, Harris CW, Hill MN, Zeger SL, Levine DM

Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

The objective of this study was to determine the prevalence of symptoms and the morbidity associated with Raynaud's phenomenon (RP) among African Americans. A total of 2196 randomly selected residents of an inner-city community, in Baltimore, completed a health-assessment survey. Symptoms of RP consisted of cold sensitivity plus cold-induced white or blue digital color change. One third (n = 703) reported cold sensitivity and 14% (n = 308) reported digital color change; 84 residents with symptoms of RP were identified, yielding an overall prevalence rate of 3.8% (95% confidence interval [CI] 3.0-4.6). RP was associated with poor or fair health status (odds ratio [OR] = 1.82, CI 1.18-2.81), heart disease (OR = 2.32, CI 1.39-3.87), and stroke (OR = 2.20, CI 1.17-4.15), after adjustment for age, gender, and physician-diagnosed arthritis. The prevalence of symptoms of RP in this African-American community is comparable to published reports from other populations. These community-based data suggest that identification of RP among African Americans should raise consideration of possible comorbidity, particularly cardiovascular disease.

PMID: 10360339, UI: 99287084


Ethn Dis 1999 Winter;9(1):22-32

Ethnic variation in the health burden of self-reported diabetes in adults aged 75 and older.

Black SA, Jakobi PL, Rush RD, DiNuzzo AR, Garcia D

Center on Aging, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555-0860, USA. sblack@utmb.edu

OBJECTIVE: The health burden of self-reported diabetes was compared across three ethnic groups of older adults. METHODS: Analysis of variance and logistic regression were used to compare ethnic differences in the rates of co-morbid chronic health conditions, complications, and disability for older diabetics vs non-diabetics, in a sample of 173 Mexican Americans, 201 African Americans, and 181 non-Hispanic whites, all aged 75 and older. RESULTS: The prevalence of self-reported diabetes was significantly higher in older Mexican Americans (17.6%) and African Americans (16.4%) than in non-Hispanic whites (8.5%). In all three ethnic groups, and after controlling for sociodemographic characteristics, diabetics were found to be generally at higher risk for chronic conditions such as heart disease, stroke, and hypertension, circulation and foot problems, obesity, and impaired vision and activities of daily living. Multivariate analyses indicated that the burden of diabetes appeared to be greatest among non-Hispanic white diabetics. We suggest that this is the result of higher diabetes-mortality rates among minority diabetics at earlier ages. CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes is known to be increasing in prevalence and incidence, particularly among the elderly, the fastest growing segment of the population. Our findings indicate that regardless of ethnicity, diabetes carries an increased burden that affects both the functioning and the quality of life of older adults.

PMID: 10355472, UI: 99281603


J Hypertens Suppl 1999 Feb;17(1):S19-24

Difficult-to-treat hypertensive populations: focus on African-Americans and people with type 2 diabetes.

Flack JM, Hamaty M

Department of Internal Medicine, Wayne State University School of Medicine, John D. Dingell VA Medical Center, and the Detroit Medical Center, Michigan 48201, USA. jflack@oncgate.roc.wayne.edu

The awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension has risen steadily over the past three decades, until the early 1990s. However, blood pressure control to < 140/90 mmHg is attained in fewer than 25% of all hypertensive patients and fewer than 50% of drug-treated hypertensive patients, except for white women. Two special populations, African-Americans and diabetics, share several important attributes. First, they both have a high prevalence of hypertension, including stage 3 hypertension (as defined by the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of Hypertension VI: > or =180/110 mmHg), relative to other subgroups. African-Americans have an approximate 8% prevalence of stage 3 hypertension, and elevated systolic blood pressure is highly prevalent among diabetic people, particularly older African-American women. Second, both groups have high levels of blood-pressure-related target-organ damage, which contributes to their inordinately high absolute risk for cardiovascular disease complications (i.e. stroke, congestive heart failure, renal failure) at a given level of blood pressure. Moreover, the reduced natriuretic capacity common to each group contributes to the attenuated efficacy of antihypertensive drug monotherapy, particularly for drug classes other than diuretics and calcium antagonists. These two special populations are also typically salt-sensitive, an intermediate blood pressure phenotype that raises blood pressure medication requirements. This phenomenon has been associated with an attenuation in the normal nocturnal fall in blood pressure. The high absolute risk for cardiovascular disease among diabetics led to the formulation of more aggressive treatment recommendations for antihypertensive drug therapy. In diabetics, blood pressure therapy is initiated at blood pressures > or = 130/85 mmHg, and treatment goals are at least to this level, unless proteinuria is > or = 1g/day (in which case the goals are < 125/75 mmHg). The more aggressive treatment targets for diabetics will not be reached with most currently available single antihypertensive agents in many African-Americans. While at best only 50-60% of hypertensive patients can be controlled with single drug therapy, that percentage falls dramatically in persons with stage 3 hypertension and renal insufficiency, thereby necessitating the use of combination drug therapy. Treatment alone is not enough; treatment to goal blood pressure is an essential first step towards optimal target-organ protection. While circulating levels of renin are suppressed, in general, in these special populations, each group manifests an inordinate burden of blood-pressure-related target-organ damage that has been linked to excessive levels of angiotensin II or a reduced bradykinin and nitric oxide tissue effect. The renin-angiotensin-aldo-sterone-kinin system is therefore an attractive therapeutic target that might conceivably provide target-organ protection over and above that attributable solely to lowering the blood pressure.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 10340840, UI: 99270688


Nurs Res 1999 May-Jun;48(3):183-7

Family recruitment issues and strategies: caregiving in rural African Americans.

Eaves YD

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of Nursing, 27599-7460, USA.

PMID: 10337849, UI: 99268171


Neurology 1999 May 12;52(8):1617-21

Racial differences in the incidence of intracerebral hemorrhage: effects of blood pressure and education.

Qureshi AI, Giles WH, Croft JB

Department of Neurology, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.

OBJECTIVE: To determine the relative risk (RR) of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) among African Americans compared with that among whites. METHODS: Data from the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey Epidemiologic Follow-up Study were used to determine the incidence of ICH (n = 78) in 10,851 whites and 1,802 African Americans during a 20-year follow-up period. Cox proportional hazards analyses were used to determine the RR of ICH among African Americans compared with that among whites. RESULTS: The estimated annual incidence of ICH was 50 per 100,000 among African Americans and 28 per 100,000 among whites. The age- and sex-adjusted RR for ICH among African Americans was 1.9 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1 to 3.2). With the addition of systolic blood pressure and educational attainment to the Cox proportional hazards model, the RR decreased to 1.6 (95% CI, 0.9 to 2.7). The adjustment for additional cerebrovascular disease risk factors did not change this risk estimate appreciably. CONCLUSIONS: Compared with whites, African Americans have a twofold increased risk for ICH. Most of this risk may be explained by differences in educational attainment and systolic blood pressure. Unless additional efforts are undertaken to reduce racial differences in the prevalence of stroke risk factors, mainly systolic blood pressure and socioeconomic status, the African American-white disparities in the risk for ICH will likely continue.

PMID: 10331687, UI: 99260530


J Am Geriatr Soc 1999 Apr;47(4):482-6

Alzheimer's disease symptom severity in blacks and whites.

Shadlen MF, Larson EB, Gibbons L, McCormick WC, Teri L

Department of Medicine, Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, USA.

OBJECTIVE: In order to determine whether there are racial differences in Alzheimer's Disease (AD) symptom severity and vascular comorbidities, we compared African-American (black) and Caucasian (white) patients with AD from similar socioeconomic backgrounds at the time the disease was first recognized. DESIGN: Cross-sectional observational study from a population-based dementia registry. PARTICIPANTS: Patients were enrolled from an HMO base population of 23,000 persons more than age 60 in Seattle, Washington. This study examines 453 subjects with probable AD (38 blacks (mean age 76.5, SD 6.4), and 415 whites (mean age 79.7, SD 6.7)). MEASUREMENTS: Measured were patient demographics, age at onset of AD, AD symptom duration, Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) score, Blessed Dementia Rating Scale, presence of psychiatric symptoms, and vascular comorbidities. RESULTS: Blacks had significantly lower mean cognitive scores (MMSE = 17.2, SD 5.6) compared with whites (MMSE = 20.2, SD 5.2, unpaired t test P < .01). The significant racial difference in MMSE scores persisted after controlling for education, duration of AD symptoms, age, and ADL impairment. Blacks and whites did not differ significantly regarding gender distribution, education level, income, or percent with early age of onset of AD. No statistically significant race-related differences were found in impairments in activities of daily living or symptoms of paranoia, hallucinations, or agitation. Blacks had significantly higher rates of hypertension (56%) compared with whites (34%) (Fisher's exact test, P = .013), but the rates of stroke and ischemic heart disease were similar. CONCLUSIONS: Despite uniform detection methods and controlling for reported duration of dementia symptoms, measured cognitive impairment is significantly more severe when AD is recognized in blacks compared with whites. The significantly higher prevalence of hypertension among black AD cases was not associated with excess cerebrovascular disease comorbidity. This study highlights a need for normative measurements of cognitive function in minority AD groups in order to distinguish differential cognitive symptom severity from possible measurement bias.

PMID: 10203126, UI: 99217776


Ann Epidemiol 1999 Apr;9(3):149-58

The relationship between lipids/lipoproteins and atherosclerosis in African Americans and whites: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study.

Sorlie PD, Sharrett AR, Patsch W, Schreiner PJ, Davis CE, Heiss G, Hutchinson R

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.

PURPOSE: The relationships between lipids/lipoproteins and atherosclerosis were determined in African Americans and whites to assess the consistency of the relationship between these two groups. Differences could suggest varying biological, environmental, or life-style cofactors influencing development of atherosclerosis. METHODS: In the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, 2966 African Americans and 9399 whites had determinations of LDL, HDL, HDL2, and HDL3 cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoprotein A1 and B, and lipoprotein (a). Carotid intimal-medial thickening (IMT) was measured using B-mode ultrasound imaging. RESULTS: The associations, using linear regression, between carotid IMT and LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and other lipid measurements were significantly weaker in African Americans than whites. Averaging men and women, a 1.034 mmol/L (40 mg/dl) difference in LDL cholesterol was associated with a 0.028 mm IMT difference in whites but a 0.019 difference in African Americans. Similarly, for HDL cholesterol, a 0.44 mmol/L (17 mg/dl) difference is associated wth 0.026 mm difference in carotid IMT in whites and 0.011 mm difference in African Americans. The associations are much weaker in African Americans than whites at the bifurcation and internal carotid, the carotid sites most prone to atherosclerosis. Analysis was done stratifying for risk factors that differ between African Americans and whites, but within most, the relationships remained substantially weaker in African Americans. CONCLUSIONS: We have observed a statistically significant difference in the association between many lipids/lipoproteins and carotid IMT between African Americans and whites. Analysis of many potential cofactors have not provided an explanation for the weaker association. Although possible differences in prior levels of these lipids may provide one explanation for the finding, these results need confirmation in other studies.

Comments:

  • Comment in: Ann Epidemiol 1999 Apr;9(3):147-8

PMID: 10192646, UI: 99206864


Am J Public Health 1999 Apr;89(4):546-52

The prevalence and health burden of self-reported diabetes in older Mexican Americans: findings from the Hispanic established populations for epidemiologic studies of the elderly.

Black SA, Ray LA, Markides KS

Jennie Sealy Hospital, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston 77555-0460, USA. sblack@utmb.edu

OBJECTIVES: The prevalence and health burden of self-reported adult-onset diabetes mellitus were examined in older Mexican Americans. METHODS: Data from the Hispanic Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly were used to assess the prevalence of self-reported diabetes and its association with other chronic conditions, disability, sensory impairments, health behaviors, and health service use in 3050 community-dwelling Mexican Americans 65 years and older. RESULTS: The prevalence of self-reported diabetes in this sample was 22%, and there were high rates of obesity, diabetes-related complications, and diabetic medication use. Myocardial infarction, stroke, hypertension, angina, and cancer were significantly more common in diabetics than in nondiabetics, as were high levels of depressive symptoms, low perceived health status, disability, incontinence, vision impairment, and health service use. Many of the rate differences found in this sample of older Mexican Americans were higher than those reported among other groups of older adults. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that the prevalence and health burden of diabetes are greater in older Mexican Americans than in older non-Hispanic Whites and African Americans, particularly among elderly men.

PMID: 10191799, UI: 99207523


Am J Cardiol 1999 Apr 1;83(7):1144-5, A10

Risk factors for new atherothrombotic brain infarction in older African-American men and women.

Aronow WS, Ahn C, Gutstein H

Hebrew Hospital Home, Bronx, New York 10475, USA.

Independent risk factors for new atherothrombotic brain infarction (ABI) in older African-American men were hypertension (risk ratio 4.381), diabetes mellitus (risk ratio 2.872), and previous ABI (risk ratio 1.904). Independent risk factors for new coronary events in older African-American women were cigarette smoking (risk ratio 2.754), hypertension (risk ratio 5.914), diabetes mellitus (risk ratio 3.464), serum total cholesterol (risk ratio 1.008), serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (inverse association) (risk ratio 0.958), age (risk ratio 1.026), and previous ABI (risk ratio 2.601).

PMID: 10190539, UI: 99204814


Bull N Y Acad Med 1995 Winter;72(2):470-82

Differential mortality in New York City (1988-1992). Part One: excess mortality among non-Hispanic blacks.

Fang J, Madhavan S, Cohen H, Alderman MH

Department of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10461, USA.

To determine the distribution of mortality for non-Hispanic blacks and non-Hispanic whites in New York City, death certificates issued in New York City during 1988 through 1992, and the relevant 1990 US census data for New York City, have been examined. Age-adjusted death rates for blacks and whites by gender and cause of death were computed based on the US population in 1940. Also, standard mortality ratios and excess mortality were calculated using the New York City mortality rate as reference. The results showed that New York City blacks had higher age-adjusted death rates than whites regardless of cause, including stroke, AIDS, homicide, and diabetes. The rate for New York City blacks was also higher than the US total for both genders. Using New York City mortality rates as a reference, more than 80% of excess deaths in blacks occurred before age 65. Injury/poisoning was the leading cause of excess death (20.1%) in black males, while in black females, cardiovascular disease was the largest single cause of excess deaths (24.8%). The higher death rates, especially premature death, of blacks in New York City are related to conditions such as violence, substance abuse, and AIDS, for which prevention rather than medical care is the more likely solution, as well as to cardiovascular diseases, where both prevention through behavioral change, and health and medical care, can influence outcome.

PMID: 10101383, UI: 99201599


Am J Med Sci 1999 Mar;317(3):168-75

Why is left ventricular hypertrophy so predictive of morbidity and mortality?

Benjamin EJ, Levy D

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's Framingham Heart Study, MA 01702, USA. emelia@fram.nhlbi.nih.gov

The prevalence, prognosis, and predictors of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) are reviewed, and theories of the pathogenesis of the relation between LVH and poor prognosis are summarized to highlight controversies in the field. In the Framingham Heart Study, which consists largely of white people, echocardiographic LVH has a prevalence of 14% in men and 18% in women. The prevalence of LVH is reported to be elevated in African Americans compared with whites, although the higher prevalence has been attributed to the increased prevalence of hypertension and obesity. Echocardiographic LVH is independently associated with a variety of cardiovascular endpoints, including coronary heart disease and stroke. Furthermore, after adjusting for other cardiovascular disease risk factors, LVH is associated with a doubling in mortality in both white and African American cohorts. Despite the intensive investigation of LVH, there remain many unanswered questions: To what extent do genetic or other factors account for the large portion of the variance in LVH that remains unexplained? What is the prognosis of LVH and left ventricular geometry in a population-based African American cohort? How does the development and progression of LVH relate to other risk factors and their treatment? What is the relation of LVH to poor prognosis? The proposed Jackson Heart Study will help address many important unanswered questions regarding LVH.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 10100690, UI: 99198789


Am J Med Sci 1999 Mar;317(3):160-7

Why do we have a stroke belt in the southeastern United States? A review of unlikely and uninvestigated potential causes.

Howard G

Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston Salem, North Carolina 27157-1063, USA.

Although there is widespread recognition of a region with high stroke mortality in the southeastern United States that has persisted over the past 50 years (ie, the "stroke belt"), there is little agreement as to its underlying cause(s). Herein, we review data supporting 10 potential causes for the stroke belt, and assess: (1) the likelihood that each is the contributing factor to the excess mortality, and (2) areas of investigation where data are lacking and that require additional research efforts.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 10100689, UI: 99198788


Am J Med Sci 1999 Mar;317(3):152-9

What is the role of dietary sodium and potassium in hypertension and target organ injury?

He J, Whelton PK

Department of Epidemiology, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. jhe@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu

There is substantial evidence from both observational epidemiology studies and randomized controlled trials that dietary intake of sodium and potassium is important in the etiology of hypertension. However, the direct evidence for a direct link between dietary sodium and potassium and risk of cardiovascular and renovascular events is limited. Epidemiological studies should be designed to examine the relationship between dietary intake of sodium and potassium and risk of stroke, coronary heart disease, left ventricular hypertrophy, and renal disease in a prospective manner. In these studies, dietary intake of sodium and potassium should be estimated using multiple 24-hour urine collections. These studies should be focused on African Americans because they are at a disproportionately high risk of developing hypertension and blood pressure-related vascular disease. Moreover, this group has been underrepresented in most previous epidemiological studies.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 10100688, UI: 99198787


Am J Crit Care 1999 Mar;8(2):101-4

Differences in African American and white women with myocardial infarction: history, presentation, diagnostic methods, and infarction type.

Griffiths DH, Pokorny ME, Bowman JM

Nursing Program, Nash Community College, Rocky Mount, NC, USA.

BACKGROUND: Despite overall declining death rates from cardiovascular disease, the number of women dying of cardiovascular disease increases each year, with substantially higher rates in African American women than in white women. OBJECTIVE: To investigate differences in presentation, diagnostic method, and type of infarction between African American and white women with myocardial infarction. METHODS: Chart review of all women with discharge diagnosis of myocardial infarction. RESULTS: No significant differences were found between African American and white women in admitting diagnosis, diagnostic methods, or type of infarction. At the time of admission, 2 medical history variables, stroke and hypertension, differed significantly between African American and white women (P = .027 and P = .002, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Healthcare professionals must be aware of possible racial differences in medical history, signs and symptoms, and prognosis when assessing patients and planning interventions. Studies with larger samples are needed to confirm these findings on African American and white women with myocardial infarction.

PMID: 10071700, UI: 99171094


Genet Epidemiol 1999;16(2):165-78

Family history of coronary heart disease and pre-clinical carotid artery atherosclerosis in African-Americans and whites: the ARIC study: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities.

Bensen JT, Li R, Hutchinson RG, Province MA, Tyroler HA

Department of Public Health Sciences, Bowman Gray School of Medicine and the Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157, USA.

The association between family history of coronary heart disease (CHD) and morbidity and mortality due to atherosclerotic sequelae, although well documented in population-based samples of whites, has been little studied in African Americans. Less is known about the relationship between a family history of CHD and pre-clinical atherosclerosis. We report the relation between family history of CHD, summarized in a family risk score (FRS), and asymptomatic atherosclerosis at the extracranial carotid arteries, measured by B-mode ultrasound. The FRS was assessed in relatives of 3,034 African Americans and 9,048 white probands aged 45 to 64 years, in the four community-based cohorts of the ARIC Study. The analyses were restricted to individuals free of clinically manifest CHD. The distribution of CHD FRS by ethnic-gender groups was right skewed, with slightly higher mean values for white than African-American males, and for African-American than white females. In a series of multivariate linear regression models with mean carotid artery intima-media wall thickness (IMT) as the dependent variable, FRS was associated positively with IMT in white and African-American women and white men. In a multiple regression model, approximately one-half of the quantitative statistical relationship of the CHD FRS with IMT in whites was statistically explained by the major risk factors considered as intervening, explanatory variables in this analysis. This association in African-American women was fully explained by the major risk factors. The FRS was not, however, associated with atherosclerosis or major risk factors in African-American males, in the ARIC Study.

PMID: 10030399, UI: 99153470


J Health Care Poor Underserved 1999 Feb;10(1):45-71

The three leading causes of death in African Americans: barriers to reducing excess disparity and to improving health behaviors.

Feldman RH, Fulwood R

Department of Health Education, University of Maryland, College Park 20742, USA.

African Americans suffer disproportionately from several major health problems associated with high morbidity and mortality. The 1985 DHHS Secretary's Task Force Report on Blacks and Other Minorities identified six major disease categories of excess deaths for African Americans compared with whites by applying the lower death rate for whites to the American population. The report provided a stimulus for public and private action to begin to address the health disparities between minority and nonminority populations. This article examines three of the leading causes of death for African Americans and assesses the extent to which the health disparity between African Americans and whites has been reduced. The three leading causes of death for African American males are diseases of the heart, cancer, and HIV infection/AIDS. The conditions are the same for African American females except stroke replaces HIV infection. Three health outcomes measures are discussed: life expectancy, excess death rates, and years of potential life lost. A widening of the gap between the races was found for diseases of the heart and HIV infection for males and for cancer for females. An extensive list of barriers to reducing the disparity are presented from the scientific literature and strategies for reducing the three health problems are recommended.

PMID: 9989006, UI: 99143551


Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 1999 Winter;7(1):57-63

Racial differences in neuropsychiatric symptoms among dementia outpatients.

Cohen CI, Magai C

Department of Geriatric Psychiatry, SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.

This study, based on evaluations of 240 outpatients with Alzheimer's disease or multi-infarct dementia, examines whether race has any independent effects on the prevalence and levels of related neuropsychiatric symptoms. After the authors controlled for 14 potentially confounding variables, race had a significant independent effect on the levels of psychotic and depressive symptoms, the former being greater among blacks and the latter among whites. There were no differences in symptoms between U.S.-born African Americans and African Caribbeans. Although it is likely that racial differences reflect variations in symptoms brought in for evaluation, the absence of intraracial differences suggests the possibility of an underlying biological process.

Publication Types:

  • Clinical trial

PMID: 9919321, UI: 99117965


JAMA 1999 Jan 6;281(1):53-60

The protective effect of moderate alcohol consumption on ischemic stroke.

Sacco RL, Elkind M, Boden-Albala B, Lin IF, Kargman DE, Hauser WA, Shea S, Paik MC

Department of Neurology, Sergievsky Center, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA. rls1@columbia.edu

CONTEXT: Moderate alcohol consumption has been shown to be protective for coronary heart disease, but the relationship between moderate alcohol consumption and ischemic stroke is more controversial. OBJECTIVE: To determine the association between alcohol consumption and risk of ischemic stroke. DESIGN: Population-based case-control study conducted between July 1993 and June 1997. SETTING: Multiethnic population in northern Manhattan, New York, NY, aged 40 years or older. PATIENTS AND OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Cases (n = 677) had first ischemic stroke and were matched to community controls (n = 1139) derived through random digit dialing by age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Mean +/- SD age of cases was 70.0+/-12.7 years; 55.8% were women; 19.5% were white, 28.4% black, and 50.7% Hispanic. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: First ischemic stroke (fatal or nonfatal). RESULTS: Moderate alcohol consumption, up to 2 drinks per day, was significantly protective for ischemic stroke after adjustment for cardiac disease, hypertension, diabetes, current smoking, body mass index, and education (odds ratio [OR], 0.51; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.39-0.67). This protective effect of alcohol consumption was detected in both younger and older groups, in men and women, and in whites, blacks, and Hispanics. In a quadratic model of stroke risk, increased risk of ischemic stroke was statistically significant among those consuming 7 or more drinks per day (OR, 2.96; 95% CI, 1.05-8.29). CONCLUSIONS: Moderate alcohol consumption was independently associated with a decreased risk of ischemic stroke in our elderly, multiethnic, urban subjects, while heavy alcohol consumption had deleterious effects. Our data support the National Stroke Association Stroke Prevention Guidelines regarding the beneficial effects of moderate alcohol consumption.

PMID: 9892451, UI: 99107469


Ann Emerg Med 1999 Jan;33(1):3-8

Acute stroke: delays to presentation and emergency department evaluation.

Kothari R, Jauch E, Broderick J, Brott T, Sauerbeck L, Khoury J, Liu T

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, OH, USA. rashmikant.kothari@uc.edu

Study objective: To document prehospital and inhospital time intervals from stroke onset to emergency department evaluation and to identify factors associated with presentation to the ED within 3 hours of symptom onset, the current time window for thrombolytic therapy. METHODS: Patients admitted through the ED with a diagnosis of stroke were identified through admitting logs. Time intervals were obtained from EMS runsheets and ED records. Information regarding first medical contact, education, and income was obtained by patient interview. Baseline variables were analyzed to assess association with ED arrival within 3 hours of symptom onset; variables significant on univariate analysis were placed in a multivariable model. RESULTS: There were 151 stroke patients (59% white and 41% black). Time of stroke onset and time to ED arrival were documented for 119 patients (79%). The median time from stroke onset to ED arrival was 5.7 hours; 46 patients (30%) presenting within 3 hours. Of those with times recorded, the median time from stroke onset to EMS arrival was 1.7 hours. Multivariable logistic regression identified use of EMS (odds ratio [OR], 4.0; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3 to 12.1) and white race (OR, 3.5; 95% CI, 1.3 to 10) as being independently associated with ED arrival within 3 hours of symptom onset. Median time from ED arrival to physician evaluation was 20 minutes. Median time from ED arrival to computed tomographic evaluation was 72 minutes. When patients were asked the main reason they sought medical attention, 40% (60/141) of those able to be interviewed said that they themselves did not decide to seek medical attention, but rather a friend or family member told them they should go to the hospital. CONCLUSION: The median time from stroke onset to ED evaluation was 5.7 hours, with almost a third of patients presenting within 3 hours. Use of EMS and white race were independently associated with arrival within 3 hours.

PMID: 9867880, UI: 99084902


Mor Mortal Wkly Rep CDC Surveill Summ 1998 Dec 11;47(5):35-69

Cardiovascular disease risk factors and preventive practices among adults--United States, 1994: a behavioral risk factor atlas. Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System State Coordinators.

Hahn RA, Heath GW, Chang MH

Division of Prevention Research and Analytic Methods, Epidemiology Program Office, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, USA.

PROBLEM/CONDITIONS: Cardiovascular disease (CVD), including coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke, is the leading cause of death in the United States, and state rates of CVD vary by state and by region of the country. Several behavioral risk factors (i.e., overweight, physical inactivity, smoking, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus) and preventive practices (i.e., weight loss and smoking cessation) are associated with the development of CVD and also vary geographically. This summary displays and analyzes geographic variation in the prevalences of selected CVD risk factors. REPORTING PERIOD: 1994 (1992 for prevalence of hypertension). DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM: The Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) is a state-based random-digit-dialing telephone survey of noninstitutionalized adults aged > or =18 years; 50 states and the District of Columbia participated in BRFSS in 1994, and 48 states and the District of Columbia participated in 1992. METHODS: Several different analyses were conducted: a) analysis of state risk factor and preventive practice prevalences by sex and race (i.e., black and white); b) mapping; c) cluster analysis; d) correlations of state prevalence rates by sex and race; and e) regression of state risk factor prevalences on state CHD and stroke mortality rates. RESULTS: Mapping the prevalence of selected CVD risk factors and preventive health practices indicates substantial geographic variation for black and white men and women, as confirmed by cluster analysis. Data for blacks are limited by small sample size, especially in western states. Geographic clustering is found for physical inactivity, smoking, and risk factor combinations. Risk factor prevalences are generally lower in the West and higher in the East. White men and white women are more similar in state risk factor rates than other race-sex pairs; white women and black women ranked second in similarity. State prevalences of physical inactivity and hypertension are strongly associated with state mortality rates of CVD. INTERPRETATION: Geographic patterns of risk factor prevalence suggest the presence (or absence) of sociocultural environments that promote (or inhibit) the given risk factor or preventive behavior. Because the risk factors examined in this summary are associated with CVD, further exploration of the reasons underlying observed geographic patterns might be useful. The BRFSS will continue to provide geographic data about cardiovascular health behaviors with a possible emphasis on more data-based small- area analyses and mapping. This will permit states to more adequately monitor trends that affect the burden of CVD in their regions and the United States. Mapping also facilitates the exploration of patterns of morbidity, health-care use, and mortality, as well as the epidemiology of risk factors. Finally, by identifying those segments of the population with high levels of these risk factors and lower levels of the preventive health practices, public health personnel can better allocate resources and target intervention efforts for the prevention of CVD.

PMID: 9859955, UI: 99075298


Stroke 1998 Dec;29(12):2656-64

Cerebrovascular disease in African Americans.

Gorelick PB

Center for Stroke Research, Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush Medical Center, Chicago, Ill., USA.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 9836782, UI: 99055647


J Behav Med 1998 Oct;21(5):505-15

Cholesterol concentrations and cardiovascular reactivity to stress in African American college volunteers.

Clark VR, Moore CL, Adams JH

Department of Psychology, Morehouse College, Atlanta, Georgia 30314, USA.

Cholesterol levels and cardiovascular responses to emotionally arousing stimuli were examined in 60 healthy African American males and females. Cardiac output, stroke volume, contractile force, heart rate, and blood pressure were measured as the participants viewed two racially noxious scenes on videotape. Total serum cholesterol, high-density lipoproteins (HDL), low-density lipoproteins (LDL), and triglycerides were measured within 2 weeks of viewing the scenes. Multiple regression analysis showed that LDL and HDL were significant predictors of blood pressure responses. A correlation analysis revealed that total serum cholesterol and LDL were positively correlated with stroke volume, contractile force, and blood pressure reactivity. A possible relationship among stress, beta-adrenergic activity, and nonmetabolized free fatty acids is discussed. These findings suggest that cardiovascular reactivity to stress may be a new risk factor for heart and vascular diseases.

PMID: 9836134, UI: 99052854


Neurology 1998 Nov;51(5):1376-80

Specificity, isotype, and titer distribution of anticardiolipin antibodies in CNS diseases.

D'Olhaberriague L, Levine SR, Salowich-Palm L, Tanne D, Sawaya KL, Aurora TK, Perry M, Day M, Spencer T, Schultz L

Center for Stroke Research, Department of Neurology, and Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit Campus of Case Western Reserve University, MI, USA.

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: There is an association between anticardiolipin antibodies (aCL) and ischemic stroke. There are, however, also occasional reports linking aCL with other CNS diseases (OND), particularly with multiple sclerosis (MS). Hence, we studied the specificity of aCL for ischemic stroke. METHODS: Prospective, consecutively identified patients evaluated for aCL (immunoglobulin G [IgG] and immunoglobulin M [IgM] isotypes) were divided into two groups: ischemic stroke (first ever) and OND (stroke-free subjects affected by OND). RESULTS: The ischemic stroke group (n = 300) and the OND (n = 149) differed in the following risk factors: age (64 +/- 14 versus 58 +/- 15 years; p < 0.001) and proportions of African Americans (67% versus 29%; p < 0.001); current cigarette smoker (26% versus 17%; p = 0.028); hypertensive (69% versus 34%; p < 0.001); diabetic (18% versus 7%; p = 0.001); history of angina (16% versus 8%; p = 0.015) or myocardial infarction (15% versus 3%; p < 0.001). There were higher rates of aCL positivity (26% versus 17%; p = 0.050), IgG-aCL > 10 GPL (23% versus 11%; p = 0.003) or IgG aCL > 20 GPL (12% versus 4%; p = 0.012) among the stroke group than among the OND group. No differences in IgG-aCL positivity were found between the MS group and the rest of the OND group but the MS patients had a higher rate of IgM-aCL positivity than the other OND patients. CONCLUSION: IgG-aCL positivity does not appear to be a marker for CNS disease generally but of ischemic stroke.

PMID: 9818863, UI: 99034172


West J Med 1998 Sep;169(3):139-45

Ischemic heart disease and stroke mortality in African-American, Hispanic, and non-Hispanic white men and women, 1985 to 1991.

Karter AJ, Gazzaniga JM, Cohen RD, Casper ML, Davis BD, Kaplan GA

Division of Research, Kaiser Permanente, Northern California Region, Oakland. ajk@dor.kaiser.org

We compare recent trends in ischemic heart disease (IHD) and stroke mortality in California among the 6 major sex-racial or -ethnic groups. Rates of age-specific and -adjusted mortality were calculated for persons aged 35 and older during the years 1985 to 1991. Log-linear regression modeling was performed to estimate the average annual percentage change in mortality. During 1985 through 1991, the mortality for IHD and stroke was generally highest for African Americans, intermediate for non-Hispanic whites, and lowest for Hispanics. Age-adjusted mortality for IHD declined significantly in all sex-racial or -ethnic groups except African-American women, and stroke rates declined significantly in all groups except African-American and Hispanic men. African Americans had excess IHD mortality relative to non-Hispanic whites until late in life, after which mortality of non-Hispanic whites was higher. Similarly, African Americans and Hispanics had excess stroke mortality relative to non-Hispanic whites early in life, whereas stroke mortality in non-Hispanic whites was higher at older ages. The lower IHD and stroke mortality among Hispanics was paradoxical, given the generally adverse risk profile and socioeconomic status observed among Hispanics. An alarmingly high prevalence of self-reported cardiovascular disease risk factors in 1994 to 1996, particularly hypertension, leisure-time sedentary lifestyle, and obesity, is a serious public health concern, with implications for future trends in cardiovascular disease mortality. Of particular concern was the growing disparities in stroke and IHD mortality among younger-aged African Americans relative to Hispanics and non-Hispanic whites.

PMID: 9771151, UI: 98444090


Stroke 1998 Oct;29(10):2061-8

The geographic variation in stroke incidence in two areas of the southeastern stroke belt: the Anderson and Pee Dee Stroke Study.

Lackland DT, Bachman DL, Carter TD, Barker DL, Timms S, Kohli H

Department of Biometry and Epidemiology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC 29425-2203 lackland@musc.edu

BACKGROUND and PURPOSE: South Carolina and the southeastern United States have maintained the highest stroke mortality in the country. The Anderson and Pee Dee Stroke Study is an assessment of cerebrovascular disease incidence in 2 geographically defined communities in the stroke belt. METHODS: Strokes were identified in the Anderson and Pee Dee areas of South Carolina. All hospitalized and out-of-hospital deaths occurring during 1990 among the residents of these 2 areas were included. Strokes were classified by an independent panel of neurologists using a standard protocol that included specific criteria for stroke and subtypes. RESULTS: The overall age-adjusted stroke incidence rates (per 100 000 population) were significantly higher in the Pee Dee population (293.1) compared with Anderson (211.2). The geographic differences were more dramatic in the younger age groups of 35 to 64 years. Likewise, incidence rates for blacks were nearly twice the rates for whites. The rates in the Pee Dee were higher than the rates from other studies in the United States and other parts of the world. Although the stroke subtypes did not vary between the 2 regions, race-sex differences were identified. CONCLUSIONS: High stroke incidence and disease rates persist for all 4 race-sex groups in the Southeast and reflect similar risks as mortality rates. However, geographic variability in stroke rates suggests that the pattern of disease in the region is not so much a "belt" of increased stroke in contiguous areas but rather more a "necklace" of different levels of risk. These results should be useful in the identification of factors associated with this geographic enigma.

PMID: 9756582, UI: 98429656


Med Care Res Rev 1998 Sep;55(3):314-33

Do black elderly Medicare patients receive fewer services? An analysis of procedure use for selected patient conditions.

Lee AJ, Baker CS, Gehlbach S, Hosmer DW, Reti M

University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA.

PMID: 9727301, UI: 98396391


Neuroepidemiology 1998;17(4):188-98

Stroke recurrence is more frequent in Blacks and Hispanics.

Sheinart KF, Tuhrim S, Horowitz DR, Weinberger J, Goldman M, Godbold JH

Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, N.Y. 10029, USA. sheink01@doc.mssm.edu

This study was designed to measure recurrent stroke rates and identify their determinants in a mixed ethnic population. A cohort of 299 patients (110 black, 57 Hispanic and 132 white) admitted to a large urban hospital with an acute stroke between November 1, 1991, and July 1, 1993, was followed for a mean of 17.8 months. Demographic and historical data and stroke subtype and severity were recorded at the time of the index stroke. The main outcome measure was stroke recurrence. The unadjusted relative risk of stroke recurrence for blacks, relative to white, was 2.0 (95% CI: 0.9-4.4) and for Hispanics, relative to whites, it was 2.6 (95% CI: 1.08-60). Ethnicity appeared to be associated with recurrence risk only among first-ever strokes: the risk for blacks, relative to whites, was 2.4 (95% CI: 1.02-5.5) and for Hispanics it was 2.9 (95% CI: 1.2-7.4). None of the other putative risk factors for stroke recurrence identified at the time of initial hospitalization were associated with risk of recurrence.

PMID: 9701833, UI: 98367155


Obes Res 1998 Jul;6(4):268-77

The body mass index-mortality relationship in white and African American women.

Stevens J, Plankey MW, Williamson DF, Thun MJ, Rust PF, Palesch Y, O'Neil PM

Department of Nutrition, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599, USA.

OBJECTIVE: To examine the association of body mass index to all-cause and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality in white and African American women. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Women who were members of the American Cancer Society Prevention Study I were examined in 1959 to 1960 and then followed 12 years for vital status. Data for this analysis were from 8,142 black and 100,000 white women. Body mass index (BMI) was calculated from reported height and weight. Associations were examined using Cox proportional hazards modeling with some analyses stratified by smoking (current or never) and educational status (less than complete high school or high school graduate). RESULTS: There was a significant interaction between ethnicity and BMI for both all-cause (p<0.05) and CVD mortality (p<0.001). BMI (as a continuous variable) was associated with all-cause mortality in white women in all four groups defined by smoking and education. In black women with less than a high school education, there were no significant associations between BMI mortality. For high school-educated black women, there was a significant association between BMI and all-cause mortality. Among never smoking women with at least a high school education, models using the lowest BMI as the reference indicated a 40% higher risk of all-cause mortality at a BMI of 35.9 in black women vs. 27.3 in white women. DISCUSSION: The impact of BMI on mortality was modified by educational level in black women; however, BMI was a less potent risk factor in black women than in white women in the same category of educational status.

PMID: 9688103, UI: 98351389


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Lancet 1998 Apr 11;351(9109):1073-4

Looking beyond first-ever stroke incidence.

Boysen G, Truelsen T

Department of Neurology, Bispebjerg Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Comments:

  • Comment in: Lancet 1998 Jun 20;351(9119):1892

PMID: 9660571, UI: 98322008


Stroke 1998 Jul;29(7):1366-72

Opposing national stroke mortality trends in Poland and for African Americans and whites in the United States, 1968 to 1994.

Massing MW, Rywik SL, Jasinski B, Manolio TA, Williams OD, Tyroler HA

Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina School of Public Health, Chapel Hill 27514, USA. markvmassing@unc.edu

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The United States (US) has experienced declines in stroke mortality in contrast to the increases reported for Poland. As part of the Poland and US Agreement on Cardiovascular and Cardiopulmonary Research, stroke mortality trends in Polish and US subpopulations were compared in the context of cross-population differences in competing causes of death and determinants of stroke. METHODS: Age-adjusted annual stroke, cardiovascular disease (CVD), non-CVD, and all-cause mortality rates were determined for men and women aged 35 to 64 and 65 to 74 years from 1968 to 1994 for African Americans and US whites and in Poland. Mean annual percent changes of mortality rates were estimated during 1968 to 1980 and 1981 to 1994 with the use of piecewise log-linear regression. RESULTS: US stroke mortality rates declined 3.7% to 4.8% annually during 1968 to 1980 and 2.0% to 3.1% during 1981 to 1994, with similar declines in each ethnic, gender, and age group. Polish rates increased 3.3% to 5.5% annually for all age-gender groups in Poland during 1968 to 1980. Polish men aged 35 to 64 experienced increasing rates during 1981 to 1994 (1.6% annually), while Polish women and older men experienced slight declines or little change. Only Polish men aged 35 to 64 years exhibited increases in stroke, CVD, and non-CVD mortality rates during both time intervals. CONCLUSIONS: Poland and the US experienced opposing stroke mortality rate trends between 1968 and 1994. These national and ethnic trends occurring in just one generation suggest major effects of lifestyle, socioenvironmental, and/or medical care determinants.

Comments:

  • Comment in: Stroke 1999 Apr;30(4):894-5

PMID: 9660388, UI: 98321825


Biochem Biophys Res Commun 1998 Jun 18;247(2):277-9

Male-associated hypertension in LDL-R deficient mice.

Trieu VN, Uckun FM

Department of Cardiovascular Biology and Molecular Epidemiology Program, Wayne Hughes Institute, 2665 Long Lake Road, St. Paul, Minnesota, 55113, USA.

Hypertension is more common among African Americans than Americans of European descent. However, the genetic etiology has not been defined. Similarly, lipoprotein (Lp) (a), an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease, is higher among African Americans. To explore the relationship between Lp (a) and hypertension, we measured the blood pressure of transgenic mice expressing apolipoprotein(a), the unique protein moiety of lipoprotein(a). As controls, we also determined blood pressure for apoE deficient mice, low density lipoprotein-receptor (LDL-R) deficient mice, and wild type C57Bl/6 mice. Apo(a) expression was not associated with hypertension. Surprisingly, LDL-R deficient mice exhibited male-associated hypertension. This observation could explain the higher incidence of atherosclerosis in male LDL-R deficient mice and human familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) patients. LDL-R deficient mice were more sensitive to photochemically induced cerebral stroke. However, this hypersensitivity was only modestly associated with sexual dimorphism. The presented data suggest that LDL-R deficiency results in hitherto unrecognized changes in the vascular tone. Copyright 1998 Academic Press.

PMID: 9642116, UI: 98308106


Neurology 1998 Jun;50(6):1688-93

Illicit drug-associated ischemic stroke in the Baltimore-Washington Young Stroke Study.

Sloan MA, Kittner SJ, Feeser BR, Gardner J, Epstein A, Wozniak MA, Wityk RJ, Stern BJ, Price TR, Macko RF, Johnson CJ, Earley CJ, Buchholz D

Department of Neurology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA.

BACKGROUND: Limited information exists on the frequency, trends in occurrence, risk factors, mechanisms, and outcome of ischemic stroke associated with illicit drug use among young adults in a geographically defined population. METHODS: We reviewed ischemic stroke in young adults (aged 15 to 44 years) in 46 regional hospitals for 1988 and 1991. We examined stroke mechanisms and outcome in patients with recent drug use. RESULTS: Recent illicit drug use was noted in 51/422 (12.1%) stroke patients. Patients with drug use were more likely than other stroke patients to be black (p=0.01), aged 25 to 39 years (p=0.004), and smokers (p=0.006), and were less likely to have hypertension (p=0.004) or diabetes mellitus (p=0.004). Drug use was the probable cause of stroke in 20 (4.7%) patients. Among 31 (7.3%) patients with drug use as a possible stroke mechanism, more likely diagnoses included cardioembolic stroke in 18, hematologic/collagen vascular in 6, nonatherosclerotic vasculopathy in 5, and atherosclerosis in 3. There was no difference in outcome between drug-associated and non-drug associated stroke. CONCLUSIONS: Recent illicit drug use occurs in 12.1% of young adult stroke patients. Drug-associated young adult stroke seems to relate to vascular mechanisms other than those related to hypertension or diabetes. Case-control studies are needed.

PMID: 9633712, UI: 98295469


Hypertension 1998 Jun;31(6):1206-15

Conference report on stroke mortality in the southeastern United States.

Perry HM, Roccella EJ

Department of Veterans Affairs and Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA. perry.h mitchell jr@st-louis.va.gov

A workshop to describe and then seek possible causes for the increased stroke mortality in the southeastern United States briefly considered 30 suspected correlates and discussed in more detail the 10 thought to be most likely. Recent age-adjusted stroke mortality rates in adults from industrialized countries reveal marked geographic differences. Age-adjusted statewide stroke mortality rates also differ, and they are higher in the Southeast than elsewhere in the United States. For five southeastern coastal states in the heart of the "Stroke Belt," excess stroke mortality has been present at least since 1930. In a 20-year follow-up of 10,000 veterans, the Stroke Belt had a 25% increase in all-cause mortality and congestive heart failure. A potential cause of increased fatal stroke included hypertension, which was more frequent in the Stroke Belt. No consistent patterns of lifestyle differences or of differences in potassium or calcium intake seemed to explain the higher rates of fatal strokes in the Stroke Belt; however, detailed investigations of smaller populations in localized areas seem warranted. Some data suggest a relationship between socioeconomic status and the Stroke Belt effect. Other differences in the Southeast that could explain, at least partially, the Stroke Belt effect include presence of soft water throughout most of the area, decreased antioxidant intake, and differences in the use of medical care and in the response to antihypertensive drugs. On the basis of available information, the three most likely explanations or partial explanations for the Stroke Belt are increased levels of blood pressure, localized differences in socioeconomic status, and toxic environmental factor(s). Two major recommendations were made: (1) to encourage both patient and caregiver to use all currently available means of decreasing morbidity and mortality by controlling blood pressures at or below normal levels and by reducing other risk factors and (2) to seek precise information about relationships of identified possible causes of increased morbidity and mortality in the Stroke Belt.

PMID: 9622131, UI: 98283450


J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 1998 May;53(3):M188-94

The association between chronic diseases and depressive symptomatology in older Mexican Americans.

Black SA, Goodwin JS, Markides KS

Center on Aging, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, USA.

BACKGROUND: Among the elderly population, the risk for psychological distress increases with the number of chronic diseases and accompanying functional disability. The prevalence of chronic medical conditions and functional disability varies substantially across ethnocultural groups, however. Using data from the Hispanic EPESE, we previously reported that among older Mexican Americans, the total number of chronic medical conditions and the presence of functional impairment are strong predictors of depressive symptoms. METHODS: Using multiple regression, we examined the association between specific chronic diseases, individual functional disabilities, and depressive symptoms in this group of ethnic elders. RESULTS: Multiple regression models indicated that diabetes (OR = 1.25, 95% CI = 1.03-1.56), arthritis (OR = 1.42, 95% CI = 1.17-1.72), urinary incontinence (OR = 1.94, 95% CI = 1.46-2.59), bowel incontinence (OR = 2.28, 95% CI = 1.15-4.55), kidney disease (OR = 3.11, 95% CI = 1.13-8.58), and ulcers (OR = 2.56, 95% CI = 1.23-5.29) were predictive of high levels of depressive symptoms. Hip fracture, although recognized as having a substantial impact on functional status, was not found to be associated with depressive symptoms. History of stroke was not significantly associated with depressive symptoms in bivariate or multivariate analyses, but history of stroke with residual speech problems was predictive (OR = 2.16, 95% CI = 1.01-4.79). Among specific activities of daily living, only impaired ability to walk across a room (OR = 1.65, 95% CI = 1.04-2.73) or to bathe oneself (OR = 1.87, 95% CI = 1.12-3.12) proved to be predictive in multivariate analyses. CONCLUSIONS: This constellation of chronic medical conditions and functional disabilities is very different from those reported to be associated with depressive symptoms in older non-Hispanic White and African Americans, and appears to comprise those conditions most associated with substantial physical impairment, pain, and discomfort.

PMID: 9597050, UI: 98259338


Stroke 1998 May;29(5):908-12

Cigarette smoking as a determinant of high-grade carotid artery stenosis in Hispanic, black, and white patients with stroke or transient ischemic attack.

Mast H, Thompson JL, Lin IF, Hofmeister C, Hartmann A, Marx P, Mohr JP, Sacco RL

Stroke Unit, The Neurological Institute, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, NY 10032, USA. ah267@columbia.edu

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: We sought to investigate the association of cigarette smoking with high-grade carotid artery stenosis in Hispanic, black, and white patients with cerebral ischemia in two independent samples. METHODS: Prospectively collected data from the Northern Manhattan Stroke Study (NOMASS) (n=431) and the Berlin Cerebral Ischemia Databank (BCID) (n=483) were used separately for a cross-sectional study estimating the association between cigarette smoking and high-grade carotid stenosis (defined as a luminal narrowing of > or =60%, diagnosed by duplex and/or Doppler ultrasound). In both studies, cerebral ischemia patients with normal sonographic findings or nonstenosing plaques of their carotid arteries served as a comparison group. Multivariate logistic regression models were used for statistical tests to determine the association between smoking and the dependent variable for high-grade carotid stenosis. Age, sex, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, and race/ethnicity were considered potential confounders. Further analyses of the NOMASS data estimated the effect of the amount of cigarette use and the impact of race/ethnicity. RESULTS: High-grade carotid stenoses were found in 14% of the NOMASS and in 21% of the Berlin patients. In Berlin the entire sample was white, whereas in New York only 19% of the cohort were white. In both samples, smoking was independently associated with severe carotid stenosis (NOMASS: odds ratio [OR], 1.5; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.1 to 2.0; BCID: OR, 3.9; 95% CI, 2.4 to 6.4). Patients smoking 20 pack-years or more showed a significant association (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.1 to 3.9), whereas no significant effect was found for lower amounts of cigarette use. In NOMASS, white smokers displayed a significant (OR, 3.2; 95% CI, 1.1 to 8.9) association with high-grade carotid stenosis, the association for black smokers was less strong, and no association was found among Hispanics. CONCLUSIONS: Smoking is an independent determinant of severe carotid artery stenosis in patients with focal cerebral ischemia. The association differs by race/ethnicity, with the greatest effect observed among whites.

Publication Types:

  • Multicenter study

PMID: 9596233, UI: 98255672


J Natl Med Assoc 1998 Mar;90(3):141-5

The recruitment triangle: reasons why African Americans enroll, refuse to enroll, or voluntarily withdraw from a clinical trial. An interim report from the African-American Antiplatelet Stroke Prevention Study (AAASPS).

Gorelick PB, Harris Y, Burnett B, Bonecutter FJ

Department of Neurological Sciences, Rush Medical College, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.

Recruitment and retention of study subjects are key to the success of a clinical trial. In the case of minority patients, this may be challenging as minority patients have been underserved by the medical health-care system. Furthermore, minority patients are more likely to experience barriers to entry into a clinical trial such as mistrust of the medical system, economic disadvantages, lack of awareness of study programs, and communication barriers. An open-ended questionnaire was used to determine reasons why subjects in the African-American Antiplatelet Stroke Prevention Study (AAASPS) remained in the study or voluntarily withdrew in the absence of an adverse event. Potential enrollees who refused to participate in the AAASPS also were queried. Enrollees who remained in the program consistently stated that they participated to reduce the risk of stroke recurrence and to help others by finding a "cure" for stroke. Those who withdrew or refused to participate consistently stated that they were afraid of being used as "guinea pigs." A "recruitment triangle" emerged that might predict a patient's likelihood of participation in a clinical trial. The sides of the triangle include the patient, key family members and friends, and the primary medical doctor and other medical personnel. The organizers of a clinical trial need to be aware of the "recruitment triangle" and establish strategies to heighten and maintain its integrity.

PMID: 9549977, UI: 98211147


Am J Epidemiol 1998 Feb 1;147(3):259-68

Stroke incidence among white, black, and Hispanic residents of an urban community: the Northern Manhattan Stroke Study.

Sacco RL, Boden-Albala B, Gan R, Chen X, Kargman DE, Shea S, Paik MC, Hauser WA

Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.

Stroke mortality is reported to be greater in blacks than in whites, but stroke incidence data for blacks and Hispanics are sparse. The aim of this study was to determine and compare stroke incidence rates among whites, blacks, and Hispanics living in the same urban community. A population-based incidence study was conducted to identify all cases of first stroke occurring in northern Manhattan, New York City, between July 1, 1993, and June 30, 1996. The population of this area was approximately 210,000 at that time, based on 1990 US Census data. Surveillance for hospitalized and nonhospitalized stroke consisted of daily screening of all admissions, discharges, and computed tomography logs at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, the only hospital in the region, and review of discharge lists from outside hospitals, telephone surveys of random households, and contacts with community physicians, Visiting Nurses' Services, and community agencies. Stroke incidence increased with age and was greater in men than in women. The average annual age-adjusted stroke incidence rate at age > or =20 years, per 100,000 population, was 223 for blacks, 196 for Hispanics, and 93 for whites. Blacks had a 2.4-fold and Hispanics a twofold increase in stroke incidence compared with whites. Cerebral infarct accounted for 77 percent of all strokes, intracerebral hemorrhage for 17 percent, and subarachnoid hemorrhage for 6 percent. These data from the Northern Manhattan Stroke Study suggest that part of the reported excess stroke mortality among blacks in the United States may be a reflection of racial/ethnic differences in stroke incidence.

PMID: 9482500, UI: 98141604


J Natl Med Assoc 1998 Jan;90(1):25-33

Understanding racial variation in the use of carotid endarterectomy: the role of aversion to surgery.

Oddone EZ, Horner RD, Diers T, Lipscomb J, McIntyre L, Cauffman C, Whittle J, Passman LJ, Kroupa L, Heaney R, Matchar D

Center for Health Services Research in Primary Care, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.

Previous studies indicate that African-American patients undergo carotid endarterectomy at one fourth the rate of white patients. This study was undertaken to determine if differences in aversion to carotid endarterectomy might account for some of the racial difference in utilization of this procedure. A sample of 185 African-American and white patients was selected from a cohort of patients hospitalized for stroke or transient ischemic attack at four Veterans Affairs medical centers. Of these patients, 115 (62%) were able to be contacted by telephone and 95 (83%) agreed to be interviewed. The interview included assessments of functional status, patient preferences for their current health status, and risk aversion to a hypothetical carotid endarterectomy. Patients from both racial groups were similar in age, marital status, level of education, and comorbid medical illnesses. All respondents were male. Functional status for both groups was high and not statistically different. There were no significant racial differences in patients' perceptions of their current health state. However, African-American patients expressed more aversion to the hypothetical surgery than whites. The median excess risk of death accepted to avoid surgery was 20% for African Americans versus 2.5% for whites. These results indicate that racial differences in the utilization of carotid endarterectomy may be due in part to differences in patients' levels of aversion to this surgery.

PMID: 9473926, UI: 98134195


Stroke 1998 Feb;29(2):415-21

The Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study: preliminary first-ever and total incidence rates of stroke among blacks.

Broderick J, Brott T, Kothari R, Miller R, Khoury J, Pancioli A, Gebel J, Mills D, Minneci L, Shukla R

Department of Neurology, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Ohio 45267-0525, USA. broderjp@ucsmtp.edu

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Stroke Study was designed to be the first large, population-based metropolitan study of temporal trends in stroke incidence rates and outcome within a biracial population. METHODS: We are identifying all hospitalized and autopsied cases of stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA) among the 1.3 million inhabitants of a five-county region of Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky for the period 7/1/93-6/30/94. We have already prospectively monitored for out-of-hospital stroke and TIAs for this same time period at 128 screening sites, including a random sample of all primary care physicians and nursing homes in the region. We have already identified all hospitalized and autopsied cases of stroke and TIA among blacks for 1/1/93-6/30/93 and report preliminary incidence rates for this 6-month period. RESULTS: The overall incidence rate for all first-ever hospitalized or autopsied stroke (excluding TIAs) among blacks in the Greater Cincinnati region was 288 per 100000 (95% CI, 250 to 325, age- and sex-adjusted to 1990 US population). The overall incidence rate for first-ever and recurrent stroke (excluding TIAs) was 411 per 100000 (95% CI, 366 to 456). By comparison, the overall incidence rate of first-ever stroke among whites in Rochester, Minn, during the period 1985-1989 was 179 per 100000 (95% CI, 164 to 194, age- and-sex adjusted to 1990 US population). The incidence rates among blacks in Greater Cincinnati were substantially greater than the rates among whites in Rochester, Minn, for all age categories except ages 75 and older, for which the rates were similar. CONCLUSIONS: We conservatively estimate that 731100 first-ever or recurrent strokes occurred in the United States during 1996. Studies of first-ever as well as total stroke among biracial and representative populations are critical for understanding temporal trends in the incidence rate and the burden of stroke in the US population.

Publication Types:

  • Multicenter study

PMID: 9472883, UI: 98132225

J Natl Med Assoc 1997 Nov;89(11):731-6

A review of racial differences in geriatric depression: implications for care and clinical research.

Steffens DC, Artigues DL, Ornstein KA, Krishnan KR

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710, USA.

How racial differences influence depressed elders' seeking and obtaining treatment for depression is poorly understood. Studies in other medical illnesses show older African Americans use fewer health-care services for heart disease, stroke, and renal dialysis. This article reviews the racial composition of Duke University's Clinical Research Center (CRC) for the Study of Depression in the Elderly. Possible explanations for low participation of African Americans in such programs also are discussed. During most of the first year of the CRC project, minority enrollment varied from 5% to 10%, at least one third the African-American population of the area. Active efforts to improve minority recruitment increased this percentage to 15% by the end of the project's second year. Likely explanations for low minority participation rates include 1) elders may recognize depressive symptoms, but do not seek or cannot obtain medical treatment, and 2) depressive symptoms may be attributed to a crisis of the spirit (so help is sought through prayer and the church), the "slowing down" process of aging, or part of life's burden to be endured. Future attempts at both treatment and clinical research recruitment efforts are needed to address these possibilities.

Publication Types:

  • Clinical trial

PMID: 9375477, UI: 98043047


Ann Neurol 1997 Dec;42(6):919-23

A triethnic comparison of intracerebral hemorrhage mortality in Texas.

Morgenstern LB, Spears WD

Department of Neurology, University of Texas Medical School, Houston 77030, USA.

Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is a significant cause of stroke death. Little is known about the relative risk of Hispanic Americans (HAs), African Americans (AAs), and non-Hispanic whites (NHWs) for ICH mortality. Based on the high prevalence of hypertension in AAs and the low prevalence of hypertension in HAs, we expected AAs to have the highest ICH mortality rates and HAs the lowest. Race/ethnic age-specific ICH mortality rates were calculated from Texas vital statistics for the years 1980 through 1995. Rate ratios (RRs) are reported with NHWs as the referent group. There were 15,042 deaths due to ICH in Texas during this time. In the 45- to 59-year age group, AAs had an RR of 4. The RR for HAs was 1.9. In the 60- to 74-year age range, AAs had an RR of 1.7 and HAs had an RR of 1.3. In the 75+ age group, the rates were similar among all three race/ethnic groups. We conclude that there is a significant interaction of age and race/ethnicity for ICH. At younger ages, AAs and HAs have the highest ICH mortality rates. Access to care and socioeconomic status may play a role in the unexpectedly high ICH mortality rates in HAs.

PMID: 9403485, UI: 98065743


Ethn Dis 1997 Spring-Summer;7(2):150-64

Regional and ethnic differences in stroke in the southeastern United States population.

Gaines K

Field Neurosciences Institute, Michigan State University, College of Human Medicine, Saginaw 48604, USA.

The Stroke Belt in the United States lies in the Southeastern region where stroke mortality has been higher than in other geographic regions. The U.S. (African-American) black population has a higher stroke incidence and mortality rate than the US white population. This article reviews the English-language literature relating to observed regional and ethnic differences in stroke mortality, incidence, and risk factors. In addition, possible explanations for regional and ethnic differentials are explored. The significance of these regional and ethnic differences, and directions for future research, are examined.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, academic

PMID: 9386955, UI: 98048196


Neuroepidemiology 1997;16(5):224-33

The Minorities Risk Factors and Stroke Study (MRFASS). Design, methods and baseline characteristics.

Tuhrim S, Godbold JH, Goldman ME, Horowitz DR, Weinberger J

Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, N.Y. 10029, USA. S_Tuhrim@smtplink.mssm.edu

African-Americans and probably Latinos are at increased risk of stroke compared with white, non-Latino Americans. This study seeks to determine if the known risk factors for stroke can account for this increased risk. In this case-control study controls (neighborhood volunteers) were group-matched to acute stroke cases by ethnicity in a ratio of approximately 2:1 for African-Americans and Latinos and 1:1 for whites. Extensive historical, clinical and laboratory data were collected on each subject. For each ethnic group cases were somewhat older and less well-educated than the volunteer controls. Patients in each ethnic group were similar with regard to time from stroke onset to hospital admission, stroke severity, length of stay, discharge disposition and mortality rate. With minor exceptions the distributions of stroke subtypes within each ethnic group appeared similar to those previously reported. Subject recruitment for this case-control study was completed in the manner and time frame planned. Analysis of risk factor information from this sample should provide valuable information regarding the relative risk associated with the major modifiable risk factors for stroke in the minority groups studied.

PMID: 9346342, UI: 98004328


Stroke 1997 Oct;28(10):1908-12

Familial history of stroke and stroke risk. The Family Heart Study.

Liao D, Myers R, Hunt S, Shahar E, Paton C, Burke G, Province M, Heiss G

Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 27514, USA. duanping_liao@unc.edu

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Although familial history of stroke is generally perceived to be an important marker of stroke risk, very few epidemiological studies have been published to address this hypothesis. We sought to examine whether familial history of stroke is associated with the prevalence of stroke in the Family Heart Study, a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-supported multicenter study of the familial, genetic, and nongenetic determinants of cardiovascular disease in populations. METHODS: The personal and familial histories of stroke were assessed in 3168 individuals (probands) who were at least 45 years old and 29,325 of their first-degree relatives with the use of a standardized questionnaire. RESULTS: The age-, ethnicity-, and sex-adjusted stroke prevalences were 4.8%, 4.9%, and 3.9% in probands with a positive familial, paternal, and maternal history of stroke, respectively, in comparison with 2.0% in probands without any positive familial history (P < .01). The age-, ethnicity-, and sex-adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence interval) of stroke were 2.00 (1.13, 3.54) for a positive paternal and 1.41 (0.80, 2.50) for a positive maternal history of stroke. Additional statistical adjustment for the proband's history of elevated cholesterol level, cigarette smoking status, history of coronary heart disease, hypertension, and diabetes did not alter the associations. A similar pattern was seen for African Americans and European Americans. CONCLUSIONS: The increased risk of stroke among persons with a positive familial history of stroke compared with those without a familial history of stroke is consistent with the expression of genetic susceptibility, a shared environment, or both in the etiology of stroke.

Publication Types:

  • Multicenter study

PMID: 9341694, UI: 98000901


Med Clin North Am 1997 Sep;81(5):1077-97

Epidemiology and prevention of hypertension.

He J, Whelton PK

Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

At least 43 million (24%) adults in the general population of the United States have hypertension. The prevalence of hypertension increases with age and is higher among African-Americans compared to other ethnic groups. During the past several decades, the prevalence of hypertension in the general population of the United States has declined and the proportion of hypertensives who are aware of their high blood pressure, as well as the portion who are being treated and controlled has improved. Hypertension is the most important modifiable risk factor for coronary heart disease, stroke, congestive heart failure, and end-stage renal disease. To achieve the final goal of eliminating all blood pressure-related disease in the community, detection and treatment of hypertension must be complemented by equally energetic approaches directed at primary prevention of hypertension. A small downward shift in the entire distribution of blood pressure in the general population will not only reduce the incidence of hypertension, but substantially diminish the burden of blood pressure in the general population.

Publication Types:

  • Review
  • Review, tutorial

PMID: 9308599, UI: 97453979


J Fam Pract 1997 Sep;45(3):237-42

Blood pressure response to orthostatic and mental challenge in African-American women taking oral contraceptives.

McDermott DS, Ernst FA, Nevels H, Robertson RM

Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, TN 37208, USA.

BACKGROUND: Contraceptive use among women with an elevated risk of cardiovascular disease and stroke has generated little concern among primary care physicians. African Americans in the southeastern region of the United States are particularly vulnerable to hypertension but are often neglected in research studies of cardiovascular disease. The current study examines the effect of oral contraceptive use by African-American women on blood pressure response to orthostatic and mental challenges. METHODS: One hundred African-American women between the ages of 19 and 29 years were recruited from the student populations of Meharry Medical College and Flask University in Tennessee for a study of oral contraceptive use and blood pressure. Of 95 subjects on whom complete data were collected, 31 were taking oral contraceptives (OCs). As a measure of orthostatic challenge, each subject's blood pressure was monitored by a Dinamap automated instrument while she moved from a supine to sitting to standing position. To test blood pressure reactivity to mental challenge, a subset of 34 subjects (10 OC users and 24 nonusers) were monitored while they attempted to perform a frustrating cognitive task on a computer. RESULTS: There were no differences between users and nonusers of oral contraceptives with respect to the amount of change in blood pressure associated with either the orthostatic or mental challenge. Levels of systolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure, however, were consistently higher in subjects using oral contraceptives (P < .05) under both testing conditions. Systolic blood pressure levels were 6.7 mm Hg to 9.7 mm Hg higher in OC users during each of the three conditions of orthostatic challenge and 4.4 mm Hg to 7.4 mm Hg higher during each of the four periods of mental challenge. Among OC users, mean arterial pressure levels were 2.9 mm Hg to 4.7 mm Hg higher during orthostatic challenge and 5.0 mm Hg to 8.3 mm Hg higher during mental challenge. CONCLUSIONS: While absolute levels of systolic blood pressure never exceeded 126 mm Hg under either testing condition, the difference in blood pressure levels between the OC users and nonusers warrants concern about the long-term effects of oral contraceptive use among African-American women. Although all OC users in this study were taking low-dose formulations, OC use did not eliminate the risk of elevated blood pressure in this population. Our findings suggest that caution is warranted and that alternative birth control methods should be advised for African-American women who have additional risk factors for cardiovascular disease.

PMID: 9300003, UI: 97445014

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