A high cardiothoracic ratio (≥0.47) compared to <0.40 predicted coronary heart disease mortality independent of established risk factors over 25 years (Rate ratio 1.65; 95% CI 1.01-2.70).
Cohort (n=1,191)
Does a high cardiothoracic ratio predict coronary heart disease mortality in middle-aged men?
A cardiothoracic ratio within the 'normal' clinical range independently predicts long-term coronary heart disease mortality.
Effect estimate: Rate ratio 1.65 (95% CI 1.01-2.70)
AIM: To examine the association of radiographic measures of heart size with mortality from coronary heart disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: One thousand, one hundred and ninety-one male civil servants aged 40-69 years were followed-up for mortality over 25 years in relation to cardiothoracic ratio and relative heart volume. A high cardiothoracic ratio and relative heart volume predicted coronary (n = 196 deaths) and all-cause mortality, but not respiratory or malignant mortality. After adjustment for age, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, the highest (> or = 0.47) compared to the lowest quintile of the cardiothoracic ratio (< 0.40) was associated with a rate ratio of 1.84 (95% CI 1.14-2.97) for the effect on coronary heart disease mortality. Further adjustment for heart rate, smoking, cholesterol, angina and ECG ischaemia had little effect, reducing the rate ratio to 1.65 (95% CI 1.01-2.70). Similar rate ratios were observed for relative heart volume. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiothoracic ratio within the range considered 'normal' in clinical practice predicted coronary heart disease mortality independent of established coronary heart disease risk factors. The relative heart volume, which uses measurements from the lateral as well as the posteroanterior chest X-ray, did not predict coronary heart disease any better than the cardiothoracic ratio. The extent to which left ventricular mass and systolic dysfunction-- pathophysiological correlates of the cardiothoracic ratio and relative heart volume--are independent risk factors for coronary heart disease should be further investigated.
Harry Hemingway (Mon,) conducted a cohort in Coronary heart disease (n=1,191). High cardiothoracic ratio (≥ 0.47) vs. Low cardiothoracic ratio (< 0.40) was evaluated on Coronary heart disease mortality (Rate ratio 1.65, 95% CI 1.01-2.70). A high cardiothoracic ratio (≥0.47) compared to <0.40 predicted coronary heart disease mortality independent of established risk factors over 25 years (Rate ratio 1.65; 95% CI 1.01-2.70).
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