Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics—2008 Update A Report From the American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee
Wayne Rosamond,Katherine M. Flegal,Karen L. Furie,Alan S. Go,Kurt J. Greenlund,Nancy Haase,Susan M. Hailpern,Michael Ho,Virginia J. Howard,Bret Kissela,Steven J. Kittner,Donald M. Lloyd-Jones,Mary M. McDermott,James B. Meigs,Claudia S. Moy,Graham Nichol,Christopher J. O'Donnell,Véronique L. Roger,Paul D. Sorlie,Julia Steinberger,Thomas Thom,Matthew Wilson,Yuling Hong +22 more
TL;DR: Each year the American Heart Association brings together the most up-to-date statistics on heart disease, stroke, and their risk factors and presents them in its Heart Disease and Stroke Statistical Update.
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Abstract: We thank Drs Robert Adams, Gary Friday, Philip Gorelick, and Sylvia Wasserthiel-Smoller, members of Stroke Statistics Subcommittee; Drs Joe Broderick, Brian Eigel, Kimberlee Gauveau, Jane Khoury, Jerry Potts, Jane Newburger, and Kathryn Taubert; and Sean Coady and Michael Wolz for their valuable comments and contributions. We acknowledge Tim Anderson and Tom Schneider for their editorial contributions and Karen Modesitt for her administrative assistance.
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# Summary {#article-title-2}
Each year the American Heart Association, in conjunction with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, and other government agencies, brings together the most up-to-date statistics on heart disease, stroke, and their risk factors and presents them in its Heart Disease and Stroke Statistical Update. The Statistical Update is a valuable resource for researchers, clinicians, healthcare policy makers, media, the lay public, and many others who seek the …
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References
The Lifetime Risk of Stroke Estimates From the Framingham Study
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TL;DR: The lifetime risk of stroke in middle-aged adults is 1 in 6 or more, which is equal to or greater than the LTR of AD, and women had a higher risk because of longer life expectancy.
Chronic kidney disease and cardiovascular disease in the Medicare population.
Allan J. Collins,Shuling Li,David T. Gilbertson,Jiannong Liu,Shu Cheng Chen,Charles A. Herzog +5 more
TL;DR: Diabetes, the leading cause of ESRD, is increasing in the general Medicare population at 4.4% per year, and cardiovascular disease is common, progresses at twice the rate, is associated with death before E SRD, and patients receive suboptimal risk factor monitoring.
Risk factors for coronary heart disease in African Americans: the atherosclerosis risk in communities study, 1987-1997.
Daniel W. Jones,Lloyd E. Chambless,Aaron R. Folsom,Gerardo Heiss,Richard G. Hutchinson,A. Richey Sharrett,Moyses Szklo,Herman A. Taylor +7 more
TL;DR: Findings from this study, along with clinical trial evidence showing efficacy, support aggressive management of traditional risk factors in black persons, as in white persons.
Epidemiology and determinants of outcome of admissions for atrial fibrillation in the United States from 1996 to 2001.
TL;DR: Recent trends in the incidence of AF admissions to United States hospitals from 1996 to 2001 are investigated using a representative sample of all acute-care hospital admissions in the United States provided by the Centers for Disease Control, with special attention to the importance of age, gender, race, and other determinants of outcome, namely, in-hospital mortality.
Instability in the diagnosis of metabolic syndrome in adolescents
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