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Old patients with hypertension. A 25‐year observational study of a geographically defined population (Dalby), aged 67 years at entry
Author(s) -
Lidfeldt J.,
Lanke J.,
Sundquist J.,
Lindholm L. H.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.625
H-Index - 160
eISSN - 1365-2796
pISSN - 0954-6820
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2796.1998.00391.x
Subject(s) - medicine , observational study , population , pediatrics , environmental health
  Lidfeldt J, Lanke J, Sundquist J, Lindholm LH (Lund University, Lund, Sweden). Old patients with hypertension – a 25‐year observational study of a geographically defined population (Dalby), aged 67 years at entry. J Intern Med 1998; 244 : 469–78. Objectives.  To evaluate the impact of hypertension and other risk factors on mortality, in particular cardiovascular mortality, in a geographically defined population of elderly subjects. Design.  An observational 25‐year study of a total population. Setting.  The local health centre in the village of Dalby in southern Sweden. Subjects.  All men and women born in 1902 or 1903, living in Dalby, were, at the age of 67, invited for medical and psychological examinations. The population comprised 188 subjects (109 men and 79 women); 156 (83%) of them took part in the first medical examination. Blood pressure, heart rate, weight and height were measured and laboratory tests performed at entry. Blood pressures were thereafter recorded six times, and this report is based on a 25‐year follow‐up period ending in October 1994. Main outcome measures.  Survival analyses were performed, based on definition of underlying causes of death, divided into all‐cause and cardiovascular. Results.  At entry, females had higher blood pressure than males, both at baseline and during the first 16 years of the study, regardless of whether they were hypertensives or not. Most men smoked but only a few women. At the end of the follow‐up of the present study in 1994, 138 out of 156 (88%) subjects had died and only 18 (12%) remained alive; 78 (57%) had died of a cardiovascular disease. In men, a diagnosis of hypertension as well as increased blood pressure at entry was associated with increased mortality. In women this was the case for blood pressure and risk of cardiovascular mortality. In men, both systolic and diastolic blood pressures during the study were significant risk factors for death, whereas in women this was not the case. Conclusions.  Elderly male hypertensives ran an increased mortality risk even though they were treated according to the then current guidelines; female hypertensives seemed to run the same risk of dying as normotensive females.

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