Literature DB >> 11433811

All-cause and cardiovascular mortality worldwide: lessons from geopathology.

H E Kesteloot1.   

Abstract

Highly significant age-specific differences in all-cause and cardiovascular mortality rates are reported throughout the world. Male mortality is always higher than female mortality, but the sex ratio of mortality rates decreases with age. In most Western countries, all-cause mortality rates have been decreasing during the last 25 years. This decrease is almost uniquely due to a decrease in cardiovascular mortality. It is of crucial importance to try to determine the causes of these differences in mortality at the population level. Many factors may influence mortality: the level of medical care, genetic factors, nutrition, smoking habits, pollution, stress, socioeconomic factors, level of physical activity, etc. Of all the factors considered, nutritional habits and smoking combined with a high saturated fat intake appear to offer the most logical explanation for the existing differences in mortality. The intake of saturated fat has been linked to both cardiovascular and cancer mortality. Based on the modifications in the intercept and slope of the regression lines derived from the Gompertz equation (log mortality versus age) applied to a given population at a specific time, it has been possible to show that nutritional factors influence the aging process. The Gompertz equations point to the existence of a maximum age for the human race. Caution should be exercised when extrapolating population findings to individual subjects, in whom specific factors, e.g., genetic factors, may prevail.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11433811

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cardiol        ISSN: 0914-5087            Impact factor:   3.159


  3 in total

1.  Differential evolution of mortality between Denmark and Scotland, period 1970 to 1999. A comparison with mortality data from the European Union.

Authors:  H Kesteloot
Journal:  Eur J Epidemiol       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 8.082

2.  High probability of disease in angina pectoris patients: is clinical estimation reliable?

Authors:  Poul F Høilund-Carlsen; Allan Johansen; Werner Vach; Henrik Wulff Christensen; Mette Møldrup; Torben Haghfelt
Journal:  Can J Cardiol       Date:  2007-06       Impact factor: 5.223

3.  Thirty-year trends in mortality from cardiovascular diseases in Korea.

Authors:  Seung Won Lee; Hyeon Chang Kim; Hye Sun Lee; Il Suh
Journal:  Korean Circ J       Date:  2015-05-27       Impact factor: 3.243

  3 in total

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