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Association of Conventional Cardiovascular Risk Factors with Carotid Atherosclerosis Prevalence in General Population
Author(s) -
V. S. Kaveshnikov,
V. N. Serebryakova,
I. A. Trubacheva,
С. А. Шальнова
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
racionalʹnaâ farmakoterapiâ v kardiologii
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.161
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 2225-3653
pISSN - 1819-6446
DOI - 10.20996/1819-6446-2018-14-4-552-557
Subject(s) - medicine , logistic regression , body mass index , diabetes mellitus , population , cross sectional study , cardiology , endocrinology , pathology , environmental health
Material and methods.  In the cross-sectional population-based study of general unorganized population of Tomsk aged 25-64 years ultrasound screening examination of the carotid arteries was done for detection of atherosclerotic plaques (plaque). As potential plaque determinants the following factors were studied: age, gender, smoking, low and high density lipoproteins (LDL-C and HDL-C), triglycerides, arterial hypertension, body mass index (BMI), low educational status (LES), high-sensitive C-reactive protein, glucose, diabetes mellitus, antihypertensive and hypolipidemic therapy. Study of relationships was carried out with logistic regression analysis. The error probability of less than 5% was considered statistically significant. Results.  In the crude analysis most of the determinants under study showed statistically significant relationship with plaque presence. After adjustment for age and sex, LDL-C, smoking and LES were associated with CAS prevalence. In multivariable regression analysis 9 risk factors appeared to be independently associated with plaque presence, wherein age, male sex, LDL-C, BMI and HDL-C were the most significant. In the participants of 50 years and older the smoking effect was the next in significance after LDL-C. Conclusion.  The results obtained focus attention on the comparative value of the major atherogenic risk factors and suggest that currently effective and timely control of LDL-C is of primary importance for prevention of carotid atherosclerosis in the general working-age population. As well the findings of the study evidence that at the population level smoking is still one of the leading atherogenic risk factors.

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