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Prospective study of 2750 employed men who completed a computer-scored test questionnaire measuring the coronary-prone Type A behavior pattern showed that high scorers had twice the incidence of new coronary heart disease as low scorers over a four-year period. Subjects with different initial clinical manifestations of coronary disease did not differ from one another in their Type A test scores. The double-blind design of these studies and the orderly relation of Type A scores to coronary-disease risk suggest that the coronary-prone behavior pattern is prospectively linked to the pathogenesis of coronary heart disease. The findings also indicate that the test questionnaire used is a valid means of measuring some of the ways in which behavior contributes to coronary risk. (N Engl J Med 290:1271–1275, 1974)
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C. David Jenkins
Guardant (United States)
Ray H. Rosenman
General / Preventive / Lipids
Stephen J. Zyzanski
Central Michigan University
New England Journal of Medicine
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Jenkins et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10f8365e6663f9d264c1c3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197406062902301