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(Stroke. 1996;27:819-824.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii at Manoa (J.D.C., B.L.R.), and The Honolulu Heart Program, Kuakini Medical Center (J.D.C., R.D.A., C.J.M., B.L.R., C.M.B., D.S.S., G.W.R., K.Y.), and Hawaii Department of Veteran's Affairs (G.W.R.), Honolulu, Hawaii; Division of Biostatistics, University of Virginia School of Medicine (Charlottesville) (R.D.A.); Department of Psychiatry, Medical College of Virginia (Richmond) (C.J.M.); and The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md (C.M.B., D.S.S.).
Correspondence to J. David Curb, MD, Division of Clinical Epidemiology, Department of Medicine, John A. Burns School of Medicine, University of Hawaii, 347 N Kuakini St, Honolulu, HI 96817. E-mail curb@hhs.cba.hawaii.edu.
Background and Purpose Stroke is a major contributor to total morbidity and mortality in older individuals, and hypertension is an important risk factor for stroke. Relatively few data exist on whether this relationship changes with age.
Methods To examine age-related changes in the relationships between risk of stroke and hypertension, we examined the 6-year incidence of stroke among men aged 45 to 81 years using updated blood pressure data from three examinations of Japanese-American men from the Honolulu Heart Program.
Results Both the prevalence of hypertension
(systolic blood pressure
160 mm Hg or diastolic
blood pressure
95 mm Hg or the use of antihypertensive medication)
and the 6-year incidence of stroke increased significantly with
increasing age (P<.01). The increase in thromboembolic
stroke incidence with age was more marked in those who were
normotensive at baseline (2.7/1000 in those aged 45 to 54 years to
23.9/1000 in those
65 years; P<.001) than in hypertensive
men (20.6/1000 in those aged 45 to 54 years to 33.5/1000 in those
65
years; P<.01). The age-related increase in risk of
thromboembolic stroke among normotensive men resulted in a decrease in
the percentage of strokes attributable to hypertension (50% in those
aged 45 to 54 years to 18% in those
65 years; P<.05).
Similar trends were seen for hemorrhagic stroke. There were no
age-related changes in the relationships of other major
atherosclerotic risk factors with stroke. The hypertension/stroke
relationships were present after multivariate
adjustment for age, smoking, cholesterol, and other
factors.
Conclusions In view of the greater prevalence of hypertension and the proven efficacy of treatment in the elderly, these findings do not negate the value of aggressive screening and treatment of hypertension in this age group. However, it appears that other unidentified factors have an increasing role in the causation of stroke with advancing age.
Key Words: elderly hypertension risk factors stroke
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