Literature DB >> 8615387

Ethnicity and cardiovascular disease: The Evans County heart study.

C G Hames1, K J Greenlund.   

Abstract

A long term study of diversity between two ethnic groups was developed in Evans County, Georgia. The findings are predicated on the genotypic-phenotypic interactions, with the multitude of environmental factors. The genetic-environmental interaction ultimately determines the individual's state of health or disease. For example, coronary heart disease prevalence and incidence rates were extremely low for blacks in Africa and four times lower than whites in rural South Georgia in the 1960s. Excessive hypertension and diabetes mellitus, and greater cerebrovascular disease mortality in black men, is now well known. Blood pressure levels studied in rural Africa were normal and did not rise with age, whereas blacks, conversely, demonstrated twice as much hypertension in South Georgia as whites and demonstrated an inverse relation between education and blood pressure (ie, the lower the education the higher the blood pressure). Cultural adaptation has accelerated hypertensive disease and strokes in blacks, while there remains an excess of atherosclerotic coronary heart disease in white men. Secular trends suggest that coronary heart disease is decreasing among white men but may be increasing in black men. Studies of ethnicity and biracial populations provide important cardiovascular disease associations with clinical risk factor studies.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8615387     DOI: 10.1097/00000441-199603000-00004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Sci        ISSN: 0002-9629            Impact factor:   2.378


  5 in total

1.  Commentary: Shaper and Jones, 'serum-cholesterol, diet and coronary heart-disease in Africans and Asians in Uganda': 50-year-old findings only need interpretational fine tuning to come up to speed!

Authors:  Neil R Poulter; Nishi Chaturvedi
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 7.196

2.  Practice-based Research Networks (PBRNs) Bridging the Gaps between Communities, Funders, and Policymakers.

Authors:  Anne H Gaglioti; James J Werner; George Rust; Lyle J Fagnan; Anne Victoria Neale
Journal:  J Am Board Fam Med       Date:  2016 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.657

3.  Black Resilience - Broadening the Narrative and the Science on Cardiovascular Health and Disease Disparities.

Authors:  Herman A Taylor; Tulani Washington-Plaskett; Arshed A Quyyumi
Journal:  Ethn Dis       Date:  2020-04-23       Impact factor: 1.847

4.  Left-ventricular structure in the Southall And Brent REvisited (SABRE) study: explaining ethnic differences.

Authors:  Chloe M Park; Katherine March; Arjun K Ghosh; Siana Jones; Emma Coady; Claire Tuson; Darrel Francis; Jamil Mayet; Therese Tillin; Nish Chaturvedi; Alun D Hughes
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2013-03-11       Impact factor: 10.190

5.  The relationship between metabolic risk factors and incident cardiovascular disease in Europeans, South Asians, and African Caribbeans: SABRE (Southall and Brent Revisited) -- a prospective population-based study.

Authors:  Therese Tillin; Alun D Hughes; Jamil Mayet; Peter Whincup; Naveed Sattar; Nita G Forouhi; Paul M McKeigue; Nish Chaturvedi
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2013-02-28       Impact factor: 24.094

  5 in total

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