The Cardiovascular Health Study is a population-based, longitudinal
study of risk factors for the development and progression of coronary
heart disease and stroke in adults over the age of 65 years. Both risk
factors established in middle-aged population and suspected risk factors
are examined and include hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, glucose
intolerance and diabetes, and cigarette smoking. Since atherosclerosis
is prevalent in the elderly, the study focuses on factors thought to
induce clinically overt disease. It does so in two ways: (1) It assesses
the prediction of clinical disease from non-invasive measure of
preclinical disease, such as carotid atherosclerosis, left ventricular
impairment, and arrhythmias of episodes of myocardial ischemia. (2)
Since cardiovascular events may occur in elderly people as a result of
health or life circumstances which may have changed in the months
preceding the event, the study contacts participants at frequent
intervals to evaluate their status with respect to concurrent disease,
social support networks, stressful life situations, diet, physical
activity, and other risk factors.
The study has three secondary objectives pertaining to the elderly
populations: (1) to evaluate the factors associated with preclinical
cardiovascular disease such as carotid atherosclerosis, left ventricular
impairment and episodes of arrhythmia or myocardial ischemia; (2) to
evaluate predictors of disability, institutionalization and mortality
in participants who have coronary heart disease or stroke; and (3) to
measure the utilization and impact of medical care services for coronary
heart disease and stroke.
Currently, risk associations are identified with clinical disease by the
accumulation of events. Risk estimates are compared in subgroups of
participants, such as women versus men, African-American versus
Caucasian, those older versus younger than 75 years, or those with
versus without prevalent clinical or subclinical disease. Risk estimates
are compared in subtypes of disease, such as fatal versus non-fatal
myocardial infarction, symptomatic versus silent myocardial ischemia,
or fatal versus non-fatal stroke. Estimates are compared of longer-term
(5-10 year) versus short-term (1-3 year) CVD risk.
The study is also; determining whether presence or progression of
subclinical disease (abnormalities detected non-invasively without signs
or symptoms) are better predictors of clinical disease than traditional
risk factors; identifying determinants of change in subclinical disease;
identifying characteristics of subgroups at low risk for developing CVD
(in whom preventive measures may be unnecessary).
The primary objective of the Ultrasound Reading Center is to develop and
implement a system to assess atherosclerosis in the carotid arteries
using ultrasound. This involves (1) coordinating development of a
protocol for ultrasound examinations at the field Centers and a method
for evaluating extent of carotid atherosclerosis, (2) training
ultrasound technicians of each Field Center, (3) interpreting all
ultrasound examinations and (4) monitoring the ultrasound examinations
at all field Centers. During the periods of data collection, the
Ultrasound Reading Center shall have the responsibility of assessing
within and between individual variation among technicians and codes.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Data not available.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
age differenceaorta disorderarrhythmiaatherosclerosisbioimaging /biomedical imagingcardiovascular disorder diagnosiscardiovascular disorder epidemiologycardiovascular disorder preventioncarotid arteryclinical researchdiagnosis design /evaluationdiagnosis quality /standarddisabling diseasedisease /disorder proneness /riskgender differencehealth care service utilizationhuman old age (65+)human subjectlongitudinal human studymyocardial ischemia /hypoxianoninvasive diagnosisprognosisracial /ethnic differencestroketrainingultrasonography
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