【医学英文精品课件】心血管疾病流行病学 epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (cvd)_第1页
【医学英文精品课件】心血管疾病流行病学 epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (cvd)_第2页
【医学英文精品课件】心血管疾病流行病学 epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (cvd)_第3页
【医学英文精品课件】心血管疾病流行病学 epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (cvd)_第4页
【医学英文精品课件】心血管疾病流行病学 epidemiology of cardiovascular disease (cvd)_第5页
已阅读5页,还剩28页未读 继续免费阅读

下载本文档

版权说明:本文档由用户提供并上传,收益归属内容提供方,若内容存在侵权,请进行举报或认领

文档简介

EPIDEMIOLOGY OF CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE (CVD),Public Health BETTINA PIKO, M.D., Ph.D.,Cardiovascular disease has the same meaning for health care today as the epidemics of centuries had for medicine in earlier times: 50% of the population in developed countries die of cardiovascular disease” (Pl Kertai) Someone has a heart attack every two minutes (British Heart Foundation),Public Health Significance,- Leading cause of mortality in developed countries and a rising tendency in developing countries (disease of civilization) - A major impact on life expectancy - Significantly contributes to morbidity and death rates in the middle aged population: potential life years lost, common cause of premature death, labor force (economic costs), family life - Morbidity: nearly 30% of all disability cases - Contributes to deterioration of the quality of life,Types of Cardiovascular Disease,- Coronary heart disease (CHD, ischemic heart disease, heart attack, myocardial infarction, angina pectoris) - Cerebrovascular disease (stroke, TIA, transient ischemic attack) - Hypertensive heart disease - Peripheral vascular disease - Heart failure - Rheumatic heart disease (streptococcal infection) - Congenital heart disease - Cardiomyopathies,Tasks of Cardiovascular Epidemiology,- Detection of the occurrence and distribution of CVD in populations, surveillance, monitoring, trends of changes - Study of the natural history of CVD - Formulation and testing of etiological hypotheses (risk factors) - Contribution to the development of cardiovascular prevention programs and the measurement of their effectiveness,Parts of Cardiovascular Epidemiology,1., Descriptive epidemiology: = Describing distribution of cardiovascular disease by means of certain characteristics such as : PERSON (i.e., age, gender, ethnicity) TIME and PLACE 2., Analytic epidemiology = Analyzing relationships between CVD and risk factors (which elevate the probability of a disease at population level), risk model and multicausal developments 3., Experimental epidemiology/Interventions = Strategies of cardiovascular prevention (primordial, primary, secondary, tertiary; individual and community levels),Descriptive Epidemiology I. Distribution Patterns in the World,In the world: CVD deaths account for one third of all deaths (25-50% depending on the level of economic development) among which 50%: coronary deaths CVD made up 16.7 million of global deaths in 2002, among which 7 million due to coronary heart disease, 6 million due to stroke Distribution of types of CVD in global deaths : Global cardiovascular deaths in 2002: 16.7 million among which: coronary heart disease 7.2 million stroke 6.0 million 0.9 million hypertensive heart disease 0.4 million inflammatory heart disease 0.3 million rheumatic heart disease 1.9 million other CVD,Descriptive Epidemiology II. AGE,Question: What is the relative amount of CVD in death rates in different age groups? - Early lesions of blood vessel, atherosclerotic plaques: around 20 years - adult lifestyle patterns usually start in childhood and youth (smoking, dietary habits, sporting behavior, etc.) - Increase in CVD morbidity and mortality: in age-group of 30-44 years - Premature death (64 years of age, or 25-64 years): in the elderly population more difficult to interpret death rate due to multiple ill health causes,4,6%,11,4%,22,5%,61,5%,32,7%,26,9%,26,0%,14,0%,55,8%,24,6%,14,9%,4,7%,0%,10%,20%,30%,40%,50%,60%,70%,80%,90%,100%,1-24 yrs,25-64 yrs,65 yrs,PROPORTION OF MORTALITY IN DIFFERENT AGE-GROUPS (MEN),external,others,cancer,CVD,7,3%,17,7%,35,0%,40,0%,31,3%,36,5%,24,0%,8,2%,64,7%,12,2%,18,3%,4,8%,0%,10%,20%,30%,40%,50%,60%,70%,80%,90%,100%,1-24 yrs,25-64 yrs,65 yrs,PROPORTION OF MORTALITY IN DIFFERENT AGE-GROUPS (WOMEN),external,others,cancer,CVD,Descriptive Epidemiology III. SEX,Question: What is the relative amount of CVD in death rates in women and men? - Widespread idea: CVD is often thought to be a disease of middle-aged men. - Cardiovascular mortality (fatal cases) are more common among men. However, CVD affect nearly as many women as men, albeit at an older age - Women: special case (WHO, 2004) a., Higher risk in women than men (smoking, high triglyceride levels) b., Higher prevalence of certain risk factors in women (diabetes mellitus, depression) c., Gender-specific risk factors (risks for women only) (oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy, polycystic ovary syndrome),SDR, coronary heart disease in selected European countries by gender, 0-64 yrs, per 1000000,Descriptive Epidemiology IV. ETHNICITY,Question: What is the relative amount of CVD in death rates in different ethnic groups? - In the US: increased cardiovascular disease deaths in African-American and South-Asian populations in comparison with Whites - Increased stroke risk in African-American, some Hispanic American, Chinese, and Japanese populations - Migration: Ni-Hon-San Study: Japanese living in Japan had the lowest rates of CHD and cholesterol levels, those living in Hawaii had intermediate rates for both, those living in San Francisco had the highest rates for both,Descriptive Epidemiology V. TIME and PLACE,Question: What is the relative amount of CVD in different geographical places? What are the time trends? International and regional characteristics of distribution SDR: Standardized Death Rate Direct mode of standardization, using the age distribution of a hypothetical European standard population Premature death rates for comparison purposes (64 years of age),Descriptive Epidemiology VI. World Trends,Developed countries: decreasing tendencies (e.g, USA: 30% between 1988-98, Sweden: 42%) - improvement of lifestyle factors, for example, a decrease of smoking and a higher level of health consciousness in many developed countries - better diagnostic and therapeutic procedures (e.g., bypass surgeries, hypertension screening, pharmacological treatment of hypertension and hypercholesterinaemia, access to health care) Developing countries: increasing tendencies - increasing longevity, urbanization, and western type lifestyle,Descriptive Epidemiology VII. International Comparisons,Aims: a., Where are the rates higher or lower? b., Interpretation of time trends c., Inequalities in cardiovascular death,Cardiovascular deaths in Europe (SDR, 2000),SDR, diseases of circulatory system in Western Europe, 0-64 yrs, per 1000000,EU-15 average,United Kingdom,Switzerland,Spain,Netherlands,Italy,Greece,France,Finland,Denmark,Austria,SDR, diseases of circulatory system in Eastern Europe, 0-64 yrs, per 1000000,EU-15 average (MSs prior 1.5.2004),Slovakia,Russian Federation,Romania,Hungary,Croatia,SDR, diseases of circulatory system in Hungary, 0-64 yrs, per 1000000,Analytic Epidemiology I. Role of Risk Factors,Over 300 risk factors have been associated with coronary heart disease, hypertension and stroke Approx. 75% of CVD can be attributed to conventional risk factors Risk factors of great public health significance: - high prevalence in many populations - great independent impact on CVD risk - their control and treatment result in reduced CVD risk Developing countries: double burden of risks (problems of undernutrition and infections + CVD risks),Analytic Epidemiology II. Classification of Risk Factors,Analytic Epidemiology III. Hypertension,- Systolic blood pressure 140 Hgmm and/or a diastolic blood pressure 90 Hgmm - Free of clinical symptoms for many years (screening) - In most countries, up to 30 percent of adults suffering, increasing with age in civilized countries - Positive family history - Dietary habits (a high intake of salt, processed food, low levels of water hardness, high thyramine content of food, alcohol use) - Modern lifestyle (increased sympathetic activity, psychosocial stress, leading position in job),Analytic Epidemiology IV. Rheumatic Fever and Rheumatic Heart Disease,Development: Rheumatic fever usually follows an untreated beta-haemolytic streptococcal throat infection in children As a consequence, the heart valves are permanently damaged which may progress to heart failure Today mostly affects children in developing countries, linked to poverty, inadequacy of health care access Occurrence: 12 million people currently affected by rheumatic fever and RHD, two-thirds are children (5-15 years), for example: approx. 1 000 000 in Sub-Saharan Africa, 700 000 in South-Central Asia, 176 000 in China, 150 000 in North Africa, 40 000 in Eastern Europe (!),Analytic Epidemiology V. Abnormal Blood Lipids,- Se cholesterol: structure and functioning of blood vessels, atherosclerotic plaques - Altering functions of cholesterol fractions (LDL: risk, HDL: protection) - Estrogen: tends to raise HDL-cholesterol and lower LDL-cholesterol, protection for women in reproductive age - Partially genetic determination of metabolism, partially dependent of nutrition (egg, meats, dairy products),Current Recommended Lipid Levels,Analytic Epidemiology VI. Tobacco Use,- The link between smoking and CVD (mainly CHD) was identified in 1940 - Greatest risk: initiation 16 years - Passive smoking: additional risk - Women smokers: are at higher risk of CHD and CVD than male smokers - Several mechanisms: damages the endothelium lining, increases atherosclerotic plaques, raises LDL and lowers HDL, promotes artery spasms, raises oxigen demand of the heart muscle - Nicotine accelerates the heart rate (RR), and raises blood pressure,Analytic Epidemiology VII. Physical Inactivity,- Regular physical activity: protective factor - Intensity and duration (150 minutes/week intermediate or 60 minutes/week heavy) - Modernization, urbanization, mechanized transport: sedentary lifestyle (60% of global population) - Raises CVD risk and also the development of other risk factors (glucose metabolism, diabetes mellitus, blood coagulation, obesity, high blood pressure, worsening lipid profile) - Physical activity: helps reduce stress, anxiety and depression,Analytic Epidemiology VIII. Obesity, Diabetes Mellitus, Unhealthy Diet,- Body Mass Index: 25: overweight, 30: obesity - A modern ”epidemic”: More than 60% of adults in the US are overweight or obese, in China: 70 million overweight people - Elevates the risk of both CVD and diabetes mellitus - Diabetes mellitus: damages both peripheral and coronary blood vessels -Unhealthy diet: low fruit and vegetable, fiber content, and high saturated fat intake, refined sugar,Analytic Epidemiology IX. Psychological and social factors,- Psychological factors (Type A behavior, hostility) - Depression and CVD: bidirectional link a., depression may increase the risk of CVD and worsen recovery process b., CVD may induce depression - Low socioeconomic status (SES): a., in developed countries: less educated and lower SES groups (accumulation of risk factors) b., in developing countries: more educated and higher SES groups (western lifestyle),Cardiovascular Prevention I.,Primordial: Social, legal and other (often nonmedical) activities which may lead to a lowering of risk factors (e.g., socioeconomic development, smoke-free restaurants) Primary: Controlling risk factors contributing to CVD (health

温馨提示

  • 1. 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。图纸软件为CAD,CAXA,PROE,UG,SolidWorks等.压缩文件请下载最新的WinRAR软件解压。
  • 2. 本站的文档不包含任何第三方提供的附件图纸等,如果需要附件,请联系上传者。文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
  • 3. 本站RAR压缩包中若带图纸,网页内容里面会有图纸预览,若没有图纸预览就没有图纸。
  • 4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
  • 5. 人人文库网仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对用户上传分享的文档内容本身不做任何修改或编辑,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
  • 6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
  • 7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

评论

0/150

提交评论