| Literature DB >> 35790821 |
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the number one cause of mortality worldwide. The disease profile of CVD varies considerably between different demographic groups and socioeconomic status. Atherosclerosis remains a major risk factor for CVD, and thus, believed to be a good indicator of the CVD profile in a population, yet little is known on its prevalence in sub-Saharan African populations. We aimed to determine the prevalence of atherosclerosis in a diverse South African population as found with post-mortem investigations. A retrospective file-audit was done on 10,240 forensic post-mortem reports done at a forensic pathology mortuary in South Africa, over 10-years. European descent males had the highest prevalence, with roughly one-quarter having coronary artery (CA) or large vessel (LV) atherosclerosis. European descent females followed closely, with one-fifth of the population having CA atherosclerosis and approximately a quarter having LV atherosclerosis. African descent males and females had a substantially lower prevalence in atherosclerosis for both CAs and LVs than European descendants. The mixed-ancestry population had a slightly higher prevalence of atherosclerosis in CAs and LVs than in the African population; however, it was still far lower than the European group. Some deviations in prevalence were noted within certain groups over the course of 10-years. The substantial difference in prevalence of atherosclerosis shows that in our region a diverse distribution pattern between ethnic groups and genders is present. However, follow-up studies are required to elucidate aetiological factors in cardiovascular health in our region.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35790821 PMCID: PMC9256632 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-15671-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Prevalence of coronary artery (A) and large vessel (B) atherosclerosis in different population and age groups.
Prevalence of coronary artery and large vessel atherosclerosis per demographic group.
| African descent males | African descent females | European descent males | European descent females | Mixed ancestry | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Totals | 498/8944 (5.57%) | ||||
| 218/7476 (2.92%) | 260/1057 (24.6%) | ||||
| 179/5772 (3.1%) | 39/1702 (2.29%) | 202/757 (26.68%) | 58/300 (19.33%) | 16/336 (4.76%) | |
| Age groups | |||||
| 0–19 | 0/716 (0%) | 0/428 (0%) | 0/39 (0%) | 0/42 (0%) | 0/64 (0%) |
| 20–29 | 6/1640 (0.37%) | 1/330 (0.3%) | 5/136 (3.68%) | 1/29 (3.45%) | 1/90 (1.11%) |
| 30–39 | 28/1581 (1.77%) | 4/348 (1.15%) | 13/107 (12.15%) | 1/32 (3.13%) | 2/71 (2.82%) |
| 40–49 | 34/876 (3.88%) | 3/269 (1.12%) | 23/123 (18.7%) | 7/48 (14.58%) | 1/54 (1.85%) |
| 50–59 | 50/579 (8.64%) | 10/170 (5.88%) | 52/141 (36.88%) | 9/43 (20.93%) | 3/31 (9.68%) |
| 60–69 | 41/284 (14.44%) | 9/79 (11.39%) | 60/125 (48%) | 13/45 (28.89%) | 4/12 (33.33%) |
| > 70 | 20/88 (22.73% | 12/78 (15.38%) | 49/86 (56.98%) | 27/61 (44.26%) | 5/14 (35.71%) |
| Totals | 611/8944 (6.83%) | ||||
| 308/7476 (4.12%) | 276/1057 (26.11%) | ||||
| 249/5772 (4.31%) | 59/1702 (3.47%) | 198/757 (26.16%) | 78/300 (26%) | 23/336 (6.85%) | |
| Age groups | |||||
| 0–19 | 1/716 (0.14%) | 1/428 (0.23%) | 0/39 (0%) | 0/42 (0%) | 0/64 (0%) |
| 20–29 | 10/1640 (0.61%) | 3/330 (0.91%) | 2/136 (1.47%) | 2/29 (6.9%) | 2/90 (2.22%) |
| 30–39 | 35/1581 (2.21%) | 3/348 (0.86%) | 8/107 (7.48%) | 2/32 (6.25%) | 1/71 (1.41%) |
| 40–49 | 35/876 (4%) | 8/269 (2.97%) | 26/123 (21.14%) | 6/48 (12.5%) | 3/54 (5.56%) |
| 50–59 | 83/579 (14.34%) | 12/170 (7.06%) | 44/141 (31.21%) | 11/43 (25.58%) | 4/31 (12.9%) |
| 60–69 | 62/284 (21.83%) | 17/79 (21.52%) | 64/125 (51.20%) | 20/45 (44.44%) | 4/12 (33.33%) |
| > 70 | 23/88 (26.14%) | 15/78 (19.23%) | 54/86 (62.79%) | 37/61 (60.66%) | 9/14 (64.29%) |
Figure 2Relative percentage change in atherosclerosis prevalence over 5-years. The arrow indicates the only relative increase in prevalence over these periods.