Literature DB >> 3204420

CARDIA: study design, recruitment, and some characteristics of the examined subjects.

G D Friedman1, G R Cutter, R P Donahue, G H Hughes, S B Hulley, D R Jacobs, K Liu, P J Savage.   

Abstract

In 1984, a prospective cohort study, Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) was initiated to investigate life-style and other factors that influence, favorably and unfavorably, the evolution of coronary heart disease risk factors during young adulthood. After a year of planning and protocol development, 5,116 black and white women and men, age 18-30 years, were recruited and examined in four urban areas: Birmingham, Alabama; Chicago, Illinois; Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Oakland, California. The initial examination included carefully standardized measurements of major risk factors as well as assessments of psychosocial, dietary, and exercise-related characteristics that might influence them, or that might be independent risk factors. This report presents the recruitment and examination methods as well as the mean levels of blood pressure, total plasma cholesterol, height, weight and body mass index, and the prevalence of cigarette smoking by age, sex, race and educational level. Compared to recent national samples, smoking is less prevalent in CARDIA participants, and weight tends to be greater. Cholesterol levels are representative and somewhat lower blood pressures in CARDIA are probably, at least in part, due to differences in measurement methods. Especially noteworthy among several differences in risk factor levels by demographic subgroup, were a higher body mass index among black than white women and much higher prevalence of cigarette smoking among persons with no more than a high school education than among those with more education.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3204420     DOI: 10.1016/0895-4356(88)90080-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol        ISSN: 0895-4356            Impact factor:   6.437


  819 in total

1.  Long-Term Blood Pressure Variability in Young Adulthood and Coronary Artery Calcium and Carotid Intima-Media Thickness in Midlife: The CARDIA Study.

Authors:  Chike C Nwabuo; Yuichiro Yano; Henrique T Moreira; Duke Appiah; Henrique D Vasconcellos; Queen N Aghaji; Anthony J Viera; Jamal S Rana; Ravi V Shah; Venkatesh L Murthy; Norrina B Allen; Pamela J Schreiner; Donald M Lloyd-Jones; João A C Lima
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2020-06-29       Impact factor: 10.190

2.  Intermuscular adipose tissue and metabolic associations in HIV infection.

Authors:  Rebecca Scherzer; Wei Shen; Steven B Heymsfield; Cora E Lewis; Donald P Kotler; Mark Punyanitya; Peter Bacchetti; Michael G Shlipak; Carl Grunfeld
Journal:  Obesity (Silver Spring)       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 5.002

3.  Racial differences in the incidence of chronic kidney disease.

Authors:  Paul Muntner; Britt Newsome; Holly Kramer; Carmen A Peralta; Yongin Kim; David R Jacobs; Catarina I Kiefe; Cora E Lewis
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2011-11-10       Impact factor: 8.237

4.  Correlates of obesity in young black and white women: the CARDIA Study.

Authors:  G L Burke; P J Savage; T A Manolio; J M Sprafka; L E Wagenknecht; S Sidney; L L Perkins; K Liu; D R Jacobs
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1992-12       Impact factor: 9.308

5.  Intakes of Folate, Vitamin B6, and Vitamin B12 in Relation to Diabetes Incidence Among American Young Adults: A 30-Year Follow-up Study.

Authors:  Jie Zhu; Cheng Chen; Liping Lu; Kefeng Yang; Jared Reis; Ka He
Journal:  Diabetes Care       Date:  2020-07-31       Impact factor: 19.112

6.  Matrix Gla protein and osteopontin genetic associations with coronary artery calcification and bone density: the CARDIA study.

Authors:  Brent C Taylor; Pamela J Schreiner; Terence M Doherty; Myriam Fornage; J Jeffrey Carr; Steve Sidney
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2005-03-03       Impact factor: 4.132

7.  A Dyadic Growth Modeling Approach for Examining Associations Between Weight Gain and Lung Function Decline.

Authors:  Talea Cornelius; Joseph E Schwartz; Pallavi Balte; Surya P Bhatt; Patricia A Cassano; David Currow; David R Jacobs; Miriam Johnson; Ravi Kalhan; Richard Kronmal; Laura Loehr; George T O'Connor; Benjamin Smith; Wendy B White; Sachin Yende; Elizabeth C Oelsner
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2020-10-01       Impact factor: 4.897

8.  [New AHA and ACC guidelines on the treatment of blood cholesterol to reduce atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk : Statement of the D•A•CH Society for Prevention of Cardiovascular Diseases, the Austrian Atherosclerosis Society and the Working Group on Lipids and Atherosclerosis (AGLA) of the Swiss Society for Cardiology].

Authors:  G Klose; F U Beil; H Dieplinger; A von Eckardstein; B Föger; I Gouni-Berthold; W Koenig; G M Kostner; U Landmesser; U Laufs; F Leistikow; W März; M Merkel; D Müller-Wieland; G Noll; K G Parhofer; B Paulweber; W Riesen; J R Schaefer; E Steinhagen-Thiessen; A Steinmetz; H Toplak; C Wanner; E Windler
Journal:  Internist (Berl)       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 0.743

9.  Cystatin C level as a marker of kidney function in human immunodeficiency virus infection: the FRAM study.

Authors:  Michelle C Odden; Rebecca Scherzer; Peter Bacchetti; Lynda Anne Szczech; Stephen Sidney; Carl Grunfeld; Michael G Shlipak
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  2007-11-12

10.  Association Between Visit-to-Visit Blood Pressure Variability in Early Adulthood and Myocardial Structure and Function in Later Life.

Authors:  Chike C Nwabuo; Yuichiro Yano; Henrique T Moreira; Duke Appiah; Henrique D Vasconcellos; Queen N Aghaji; Anthony Viera; Jamal S Rana; Ravi V Shah; Venkatesh L Murthy; Norrina B Allen; Pamela J Schreiner; Donald M Lloyd-Jones; João A C Lima
Journal:  JAMA Cardiol       Date:  2020-07-01       Impact factor: 14.676

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