Over 16 years, high blood pressure, left ventricular enlargement, obesity, and heavy smoking were positively correlated with sudden coronary death, which accounted for 109 of 234 CHD deaths.
Cohort (n=4,120)
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Precursors of sudden death were sought in men--1838 civil servants in Albany, New York, and 2282 residents of Framingham, Massachusetts--under continuous surveillance for 16 years. In men 45-74 years old there were 234 deaths attributed to coronary heart disease (CHD) of which 109 occurred within one hour of onset of symptoms. More than half of all deaths due to CHD occurred outside the hospital and about 80 per cent of these were sudden. Most were unheralded by prior symptoms of CHD. Persons at high risk of death from CHD, including sudden death, can be identified long before the terminal unexpected catastrophe. The same precursive stigmata exist in persons subject ot coronary attacks whether or not immediately fatal. The risk of sudden death in these two populations was positively correlated with high blood pressure, the electrocardiographic pattern of left ventricular enlargement, obesity, and heavy cigarette usage. Sudden death is a common and possibly incidental expression of lethal coronary heart disease. The potential candidate for sudden death cannot be confidently distinguished from the individual who succumbs more slowly of myocardial infarction. The inescapable conclusion is that the prevention of sudden death requires the prevention of coronary attacks.
Kannel et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in Sudden coronary death (n=4,120). Risk factors (high blood pressure, left ventricular enlargement, obesity, heavy cigarette usage) was evaluated on Sudden coronary death. Over 16 years, high blood pressure, left ventricular enlargement, obesity, and heavy smoking were positively correlated with sudden coronary death, which accounted for 109 of 234 CHD deaths.
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