| Literature DB >> 8280182 |
H W Hense1, M Stender, W Bors, U Keil.
Abstract
The antioxidant effects of vitamin E may protect low density lipoproteins from peroxidation and thus inhibit the development of arteriosclerosis. Inverse associations between vitamin E levels and coronary heart disease have been reported from cross-sectional and ecologic studies. In the population-based MONICA Augsburg cohort (2023 men, 1999 women, age 25-64 years at baseline in 1984, 93% of whom were reexamined in 1987/88) we investigated the relationship between serum vitamin E concentrations and the risk of subsequent myocardial infarction (MI). Between 1984 and 1991, 46 cases of fatal and non-fatal myocardial infarction from this cohort were recruited for a nested case-control study. Four controls were sampled from the cohort for each case of MI with matching for age, sex, and total cholesterol. There were no marked differences between cases and their matched controls in the means of vitamin E concentrations (33.9 mumol/l vs. 32.8 mumol/l, P = 0.37) or in the mean vitamin E/total cholesterol ratios (4.89 mumol/mmol vs. 4.82 mumol/mmol, P = 0.75). The covariate adjusted relative risk (RR) for fatal plus non-fatal MI in the lowest tertile of vitamin E relative to the upper two tertiles was 0.72 (90% confidence interval: 0.33-1.57). Likewise, for the lowest tertile of the ratio (vitamin E/total cholesterol) the RR was 0.81 (0.42-1.56). The association was not modified by history of previous coronary heart disease, fatality of MI, temporal distance of MI onset from vitamin E determinations, or season.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Entities:
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Year: 1993 PMID: 8280182 DOI: 10.1016/0021-9150(93)90036-t
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Atherosclerosis ISSN: 0021-9150 Impact factor: 5.162