Sex differential in the relationship of electrocardiographic ST-T abnormalities to risk of coronary death: 11.5 year follow-up findings of the Chicago Heart Association Detection Project in Industry.
- 1 February 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 75 (2) , 347-352
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.75.2.347
Abstract
The independent contributions of ST segment depression and/or T wave abnormality (ST-T abnormalities) on the baseline resting electrocardiogram to risk of 11.5 year coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality were explored among 9203 white men and 7818 white women who were 40 to 64 years old and without definite CHD at entry in the Chicago Heart Association Detection Project in Industry. At baseline, prevalence rates of ST-T abnormalities were age related for both sexes, and at every age the rate was higher in women than men (age-adjusted prevalence rates 12.3% and 8.1%, respectively). Univariate analysis showed that ST-T abnormalities were associated with significantly increased risk of death from CHD for both men and women. However, men with ST-T abnormalities had much greater age-adjusted and multiple risk factor-adjusted absolute excess risk and relative risk than women with such electrocardiographic abnormalities. When baseline age, diastolic pressure, serum cholesterol, cigarettes/day, history of diabetes, and baseline use of antihypertensive medication were included in the multivariate analysis, ST-T abnormalities remained significantly related to death from CHD in men but not women. The interaction term between sex and ST-T abnormalities was at a borderline level of statistical significance by Cox regression analysis. In conclusion, ST-T abnormalities indicate an increased risk of subsequent death from CHD independent of major coronary risk factors for middle-aged U.S. men, but this is not clearly so for women.This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The prevalence of ischaemic heart disease in three rural South African communitiesJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1984
- Independent contribution of electrocardiographic abnormalities to risk of death from coronary heart disease, cardiovascular diseases and all causes. Findings of three Chicago epidemiologic studies.Circulation, 1982
- Relationship of glucose tolerance to prevalence of ECG abnormalities and to 5-year mortality from cardiovascular disease: Findings of the Chicago Heart Association Detection Project in IndustryJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1979
- Multivariate analysis of the relationship of seven variables to blood pressure: Findings of the Chicago Heart Association Detection Project in Industry, 1967–1972Journal of Chronic Diseases, 1975
- Stress-induced and sympathetically-mediated electrocardiographic and circulatory variations in the primary hyperkinetic heart syndromeCardiovascular Research, 1975
- XVI. The Electrocardiogram in Prediction of Five-Year Coronary Heart Disease Incidence Among Men Aged Forty through Fifty-NineCirculation, 1970
- The relation of “Silent” T wave inversion to cardiovascular disease in an epidemiologic studyThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1970
- The paradox of myocardial ischemia and necrosis in young women with normal coronary arteriograms: Relation to abnormal hemoglobin-oxygen dissociationThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1969
- A study of T wave changes in the electrocardiograms of normal individualsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1964
- The prognostic implications of the electrocardiogram∗The American Journal of Cardiology, 1960