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Epidemiologic studies of coronary heart disease and stroke in japanese men living in japan, hawaii and california: prevalence of coronary and hypertensive heart disease and associated risk factors

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TLDR
At each blood pressure level and at each cholesterol level, the greater prevalence of CHD in California persisted, suggesting that conventional risk factors only partly explain the observed gradient in CHD.
Abstract
A study of coronary heart disease (CHD) among Japanese migrants compared with Japanese living in Japan provided the opportunity to study factors possibly responsible for the high rates of CHD in America as compared with Japan. Comparable methods were employed in examining 11,900 men of Japanese ancestry aged 45--69 living in Japan, Hawaii and California. The age-adjusted prevalence rates for definite CHD as determined by ECG were: Japan 5.3, Hawaii 5.2 and California 10.8/1000. For definite plus possible CHD the rates were 25.4, 34.7 and 44.6. The prevalence of angina pectoris and pain of possible myocardial infarction, determined by questionnaire, showed a similar gradient. Elevated serum cholesterol showed a Japan-Hawaii-California gradient, but the prevalence of hypertension in Japan was intermediate between the prevalence in Hawaii and the higher prevalence in California. The three geographic locations were compared as to prevalence of CHD at comparable levels of blood pressure and cholesterol. At each blood pressure level and at each cholesterol level, the greater prevalence of CHD in California persisted. These facts, plus the near universality of smoking in Japan, suggest that conventional risk factors only partly explain the observed gradient in CHD.

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Assessment of cardiovascular risk by use of multiple-risk-factor assessment equations: A statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology

TL;DR: The approaches described in this statement can be used for guidance at several levels of primary prevention; however, the statement does not attempt to specifically link risk assessment to treatment guidelines for particular risk factors, but provides critical background information that could be used in the development of new treatment guidelines.
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The nutrition transition and its health implications in lower-income countries.

TL;DR: The rapid changes in diet, activity and obesity that are facing billions of residents of lower- and middle-income countries are cause for great concern and linked with these changes will be a rapid increase in chronic diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sex Differences in Coronary Heart Disease Why Are Women So Superior? The 1995 Ancel Keys Lecture

TL;DR: The subject of the lecture is “Why are women so superior with regard to coronary heart disease?,” and the focus is on the origin of the gender gap, not postmenopausal estrogen therapy.
Book ChapterDOI

Does Culture Matter

TL;DR: A review of the literature on culture and economics, focusing primarily on the epidemiological approach, is presented in this article, where a variety of issues including female labor force participaiton, fertility, labor market regulation, redistribution, growth, and financial development among others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutritional Patterns and Transitions

TL;DR: Public health nutritionists and other specialists must learn what the nutritional requirements are for populations with a pattern of degenerative disease as well as those of populations of the pattern of receding famine and of those who are advancing toward a patternof dietary behavioral change for sound interventions.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical Aspects of the Analysis of Data From Retrospective Studies of Disease

TL;DR: In this paper, the role and limitations of retrospective investigations of factors possibly associated with the occurrence of a disease are discussed and their relationship to forward-type studies emphasized, and examples of situations in which misleading associations could arise through the use of inappropriate control groups are presented.
Journal Article

Cardiovascular survey methods.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a survey method for cardiovascular survey methods, which is based on the survey methods of Cardiovascular Survey Methods (CSM) survey method and the survey method of the Cardiovascular survey methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lung cancer and other causes of death in relation to smoking; a second report on the mortality of British doctors.

Richard Doll, +1 more
- 10 Nov 1956 - 
TL;DR: The deaths of doctors that have occurred since October, 1951 are related to the non-smoking, present smoking, and exsmoking groups as constituted at that date.
Journal Article

Electrocardiographic Left Ventricular Hypertrophy and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease

TL;DR: Risk of clinically overt coronary heart disease in 190 persons with "definite" and 264 with "possible" electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy (ECG-LVH) was compared with that of the general population.
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