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Jukka T Salonen

jukka.salonen@metabolic.fi

Journal articles

2009
 
PMID 
Niklas Krause, Richard J Brand, Jussi Kauhanen, George A Kaplan, S Leonard Syme, Candice C Wong, Jukka T Salonen (2009)  Work time and 11-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged Finnish men.   Prev Chronic Dis 6: 1. Jan  
Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Studies of the relationship between work time and health have been inconclusive. Consequently, we sought to examine the effect of work time on progression of atherosclerosis. METHODS: This prospective study of 621 middle-aged Finnish men evaluated effects of baseline and repeat measures of work time on 11-year progression of ultrasonographically assessed carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and interactions with cardiovascular disease. Multiple linear regression models adjusted for 21 biological, behavioral, and psychosocial risk factors RESULTS: Working 3 (minimum), 5 (medium), or 7 (maximum) days per week at baseline was associated with 23%, 31%, and 40% 11-year increases in IMT, respectively. The relative change ratio (RCR) at maximum vs minimum was 1.14 for baseline days worked per week and 1.10 for hours worked per year of follow-up. Significant interactions existed between cardiovascular disease and work time. Men with ischemic heart disease (IHD) who worked the maximum of 14.5 hours per day experienced a 69% increase in IMT compared with a 29% increase in men without IHD. The RCR ratio for IHD (RCRIHD/RCRno IHD) was 1.44 for hours per day. Similarly, the RCR ratio for baseline carotid artery stenosis was 1.29 for hours per day and 1.22 for hours per year. CONCLUSION: Increases in work time are positively associated with progression of carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged men, especially in those with preexisting cardiovascular disease. Our findings are consistent with the hemodynamic theory of atherosclerosis.
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J Tuomilehto, M J Tikkanen, P Högström, S Keinänen-Kiukaanniemi, V Piironen, J Toivo, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, U - H Stenman, H Alfthan, H Karppanen (2009)  Safety assessment of common foods enriched with natural nonesterified plant sterols.   Eur J Clin Nutr 63: 5. 684-691 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To assess safety during a diet based on low-fat foods enriched with nonesterified wood-derived plant sterols and mineral nutrients related to serum phytosterol, sex hormone and fat-soluble vitamin metabolism. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Seventy-one study participants (52 women, 19 men) with mild-to-moderate hypercholesterolemia completed the double-blind, placebo-controlled feeding trial lasting for 15 weeks. The subjects were randomly allocated to the sterol group receiving food items enriched with mineral nutrients as well as with a total of 1.25, 2.5 and 5.0 g per day of plant sterols during the first, second and third 5-week periods, respectively, or to the placebo group receiving similar food items without plant sterols. This outpatient clinical trial with free-living subjects was carried out at two hospital clinics. RESULTS: Two significant findings were observed. Serum sitosterol concentrations increased from 2.84 to 5.35 mg l(-1) (P<0.004 vs placebo) but those of serum total plant sterols did not because of compensatory changes in other phytosterols. The highest plant sterol levels did not exceed 0.6% of total serum sterols. Serum alpha-tocopherol concentrations decreased in the sterol group by 10% (P<0.0002), but the between-group difference disappeared after adjusting for the change in the carrier (LDL cholesterol). CONCLUSIONS: Fifteen-week consumption of natural nonesterified plant sterol-enriched food does not cause any serious adverse effects during such a period. However, serum alpha-tocopherol levels were somewhat reduced in the sterol group suggesting that long-term effects of plant sterols on serum fat-soluble vitamin concentrations should be further explored, especially in relation to very low-fat diets.
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Anna L Choi, Pal Weihe, Esben Budtz-Jørgensen, Poul J Jørgensen, Jukka T Salonen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Katsuyuki Murata, Hans Petur Nielsen, Maria Skaalum Petersen, Jórun Askham, Philippe Grandjean (2009)  Methylmercury exposure and adverse cardiovascular effects in Faroese whaling men.   Environ Health Perspect 117: 3. 367-372 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Methylmercury (MeHg), a worldwide contaminant found in fish and seafood, has been linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular mortality. OBJECTIVE: We examined 42 Faroese whaling men (30-70 years of age) to assess possible adverse effects within a wide range of MeHg exposures from consumption of pilot whale meat. METHODS: We assessed exposure levels from mercury analysis of toenails and whole blood (obtained at the time of clinical examination), and a hair sample collected 7 years previously. Outcome measures included heart rate variability (HRV), blood pressure (BP), common carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP). We carried out multiple regression and structural equation model (SEM) analyses to determine the confounder-adjusted effect of mercury exposure. Taking into account correlations among related measures, we categorized exposure and outcomes in groups to derive latent exposure and response variables in SEMs. We used multiple regression analysis to compare the predictive validity of individual exposure biomarkers and the latent exposure variable on individual and latent outcomes. RESULTS: The toenail mercury concentrations varied widely and had a geometric mean of 2.0 microg/g; hair concentrations averaged about 3-fold higher. Mercury exposure was significantly associated with increased BP and IMT. This effect was reflected by SEMs, but mercury in toenails tended to be the best effect predictor. CONCLUSIONS: The results support the notion that increased MeHg exposure promotes the development of cardiovascular disease.
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Dan Jackson, Ian White, J B Kostis, A C Wilson, A R Folsom, K Wu, L Chambless, M Benderly, U Goldbourt, J Willeit, S Kiechl, J W G Yarnell, P M Sweetnam, P C Elwood, M Cushman, B M Psaty, R P Tracy, A Tybjaerg-Hansen, F Haverkate, M P M de Maat, S G Thompson, F G R Fowkes, A J Lee, F B Smith, V Salomaa, K Harald, V Rasi, E Vahtera, P Jousilahti, R D'Agostino, W B Kannel, P W F Wilson, G Tofler, D Levy, R Marchioli, F Valagussa, A Rosengren, L Wilhelmsen, G Lappas, H Eriksson, P Cremer, D Nagel, J D Curb, B Rodriguez, K Yano, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, T - P Tuomainen, B Hedblad, G Engström, G Berglund, H Loewel, W Koenig, H W Hense, T W Meade, J A Cooper, B De Stavola, C Knottenbelt, G J Miller, K A Bauer, R D Rosenberg, S Sato, A Kitamura, Y Naito, H Iso, T Palosuo, P Ducimetiere, P Amouyel, D Arveiler, A E Evans, J Ferrieres, I Juhan-Vague, A Bingham, H Schulte, G Assmann, B Cantin, B Lamarche, J - P Despres, G R Dagenais, H Tunstall-Pedoe, G D O Lowe, M Woodward, Y Ben-Shlomo, G Davey Smith, V Palmieri, J L Yeh, A Rudnicka, P Brennan, P Ridker, F Rodeghiero, A Tosetto, J Shepherd, I Ford, M Robertson, E Brunner, M Shipley, E J M Feskens, E Di Angelantonio, S Kaptoge, S Lewington, N Sarwar, M Walker, S Watson, I R White, A M Wood, J Danesh (2009)  Systematically missing confounders in individual participant data meta-analysis of observational cohort studies.   Stat Med 28: 8. 1218-1237 Apr  
Abstract: One difficulty in performing meta-analyses of observational cohort studies is that the availability of confounders may vary between cohorts, so that some cohorts provide fully adjusted analyses while others only provide partially adjusted analyses. Commonly, analyses of the association between an exposure and disease either are restricted to cohorts with full confounder information, or use all cohorts but do not fully adjust for confounding. We propose using a bivariate random-effects meta-analysis model to use information from all available cohorts while still adjusting for all the potential confounders. Our method uses both the fully adjusted and the partially adjusted estimated effects in the cohorts with full confounder information, together with an estimate of their within-cohort correlation. The method is applied to estimate the association between fibrinogen level and coronary heart disease incidence using data from 154,012 participants in 31 cohorts
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S Kurl, M Ala-Kopsala, H Ruskoaho, T Mäkikallio, K Nyyssönen, O Vuolteenaho, J Sivenius, J T Salonen, J A Laukkanen (2009)  Plasma N-terminal fragments of natriuretic peptides predict the risk of stroke and atrial fibrillation in men.   Heart 95: 13. 1067-1071 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Risk stratification for cardiovascular outcomes is gaining importance in general population. Prognostic value of natriuretic peptides has been established in patients with heart failure. However, the prognostic significance of natriuretic peptides with respect to stroke is not well known in general populations. METHODS: Plasma natriuretic peptides were measured in a representative population-based sample of 958 men (age 46-65 years) from Eastern Finland. There were 46 cases of stroke, 74 of atrial fibrillation and 31 cases of ischaemic strokes during a follow-up of 9.6 years. RESULTS: The multivariable adjusted risk was 1.35-fold (95% CI 1.01 to 1.84, p = 0.049) for any stroke and 1.30-fold (95% CI 0.90 to 1.91, p = 0.0150) for ischaemic stroke for each log-transformed SD (0.240 pmol/l) increment in N-terminal fragment of proA-type natriuretic peptide. The respective risks were 1.36-fold (95% CI 1.05 to 1.76, p = 0.010) and 1.50-fold (95% CI 1.12 to 2.02, p = 0.007) for each log-transformed SD (0.237 pmol/l) increment in N-terminal fragment of proB-type natriuretic peptide. The multivariate adjusted risks for future atrial fibrillation were 1.71 (95% CI 1.32 to 2.22, p<0.001) and 1.68-fold (95% CI 1.38 to 2.07, p<0.001) for each log-transformed SD increment in N-terminal fragments of proA- and proB-type natriuretic peptides, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: N-terminal fragments of pro-atrial natriuretic peptide and pro-brain natriuretic peptide are new additional predictors of any stroke and atrial fibrillation. Natriuretic peptides provide prognostic information for stroke and atrial fibrillation and may help in identifying subjects at risk for stroke and atrial fibrillation.
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2008
 
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David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Timo A Lakka, Jari A Laukkanen, Jukka T Salonen (2008)  Dyslipidaemia as a predictor of hypertension in middle-aged men.   Eur Heart J 29: 20. 2561-2568 Oct  
Abstract: AIMS: Dyslipidaemia and hypertension are features of the metabolic syndrome, but the role of dyslipidaemia in the development of hypertension is less clear. We assessed the association of dyslipidaemia with incident hypertension during a 7-year follow-up in a population-based cohort of middle-aged men without hypertension at baseline. METHODS AND RESULTS: In all, 88 of 311 men developed hypertension during the follow-up. A 1-SD increment in triglyceride concentrations was associated with a 1.6-fold [95% CI(confidence interval) 1.2-2.3] increased risk of developing hypertension, independently of features related to the metabolic syndrome. In separate multivariable models, the triglyceride content of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and apolipoprotein B concentrations were also associated with new-onset hypertension. In a stepwise backwards logistic regression model, concentrations of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol [odds ratio (OR) 1.3, 95% CI 1.0-1.7 for a 1-SD change] and triglyceride content of HDL cholesterol (OR) 1.5, 95% CI 1.1-1.9) were positively associated with incident hypertension, whereas HDL concentrations (OR 0.7, 95% CI 0.5-0.9) seemed protective. In factor analyses, elevated triglyceride levels and related disturbances in lipid and cholesterol metabolism were associated with new-onset hypertension. CONCLUSION: Dyslipidaemia characteristic of the metabolic syndrome predicts the development of hypertension during a 7-year follow-up of eastern Finnish men, independently of features related to insulin resistance. The recognition of dyslipidaemia and initiation of lifestyle treatment even in the absence of hypertension is likely to reduce the long-term burden of cardiovascular disease.
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K P Savonen, T A Lakka, J A Laukkanen, T H Rauramaa, J T Salonen, R Rauramaa (2008)  Workload at the heart rate of 100 beats/min and mortality in middle-aged men with known or suspected coronary heart disease.   Heart 94: 4. Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether a workload which an individual is able to perform at the heart rate (HR) of 100 beats/min (WL(100)) independently predicts mortality in middle-aged men with known or suspected coronary heart disease (CHD). DESIGN: Prospective population-based study based on 365 middle-aged men with known or suspected CHD at baseline. RESULTS: During an average follow-up of 11.1 years, there were 75 deaths (20.5%). In Cox multivariable models mortality increased by 72% (95% CI 32% to 122%, p<0.001) with 1 SD (34 Watts) decrement in WL(100) after adjustment for age, examination year, alcohol consumption, body mass index, cigarette smoking, cardiac insufficiency, history of myocardial infarction, diabetes, myocardial ischaemia during exercise test, serum low-density lipoprotein and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, systolic and diastolic blood pressure at rest, testing protocol, and use of HR-lowering medication. The risk of death was 2.4 (95% CI 1.5 to 4.0, p<0.001) times higher in 130 men with WL(100) <55 W than in 235 men with WL(100) >or=55 W. In men using and not using HR-lowering medication the risk of death increased 72% (95% CI 14% to 163%, p = 0.01), and 54% (95% CI 14% to 108%, p = 0.005) with 1 SD decrement in WL(100), respectively. WL(100 )improved the predictive power of the adjusted Cox models including other HR and exercise test variables. CONCLUSIONS: WL(100) predicts mortality in men with known or suspected CHD. The association of WL(100) with mortality was not explained by other well-established HR and exercise test variables. WL(100) is derived from a submaximal test which avoids the cardiovascular risks associated with a high-intensity exertion.
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Kai P Savonen, Timo A Lakka, Jari A Laukkanen, Tuomas H Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa (2008)  Usefulness of chronotropic incompetence in response to exercise as a predictor of myocardial infarction in middle-aged men without cardiovascular disease.   Am J Cardiol 101: 7. 992-998 Apr  
Abstract: An attenuated heart rate (HR) response to exercise, or chronotropic incompetence, has been shown to predict adverse cardiac events in subjects without known cardiovascular disease (CVD). The aim of the present study was to investigate whether chronotropic incompetence independently predicts acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in middle-aged men. In addition to previously established chronotropic incompetence variables, we focused on a new chronotropic incompetence variable, the HR increase from 40% to 100% of maximal work capacity (HR40-100), as a predictor of AMI. The subjects were a representative sample of 1,176 middle-aged men who did not have CVD and did not use HR-lowering medication at baseline. The association of chronotropic incompetence variables with the risk of AMI was examined by Cox regression models including numerous known risk factors for AMI. During an average follow-up of 11.0 years, there were 106 AMIs (9.0%). In Cox multivariable model, the risk of AMI increased by 33% for each SD decrement of 13 beats/min in HR40-100 (95% confidence interval [CI] 9 to 64). When considered concurrently, HR40-100 was the only chronotropic incompetence variable that improved the predictive value of the model containing other risk factors for AMI. Men with a low HR40-100 (<46 beats/min) and a heightened increase in systolic blood pressure (SBP) (>67 mm Hg) were at particularly high risk, with a 3.1-times higher incidence of AMI than those with a normal HR40-100 and SBP increase (95% CI 1.7 to 5.7). In conclusion, a low HR40-100 predicted AMI in men without previous CVD independent of other exercise test or clinical variables.
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Jaakko Mursu, Tarja Nurmi, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen, Eero Pukkala, Sari Voutilainen (2008)  Intake of flavonoids and risk of cancer in Finnish men: The Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Int J Cancer 123: 3. 660-663 Aug  
Abstract: Limited amount of evidence suggests that high intake of flavonoids could be associated with decreased risk of lung and colorectal cancer, but more studies are needed. In this prospective cohort study, we assessed the relation between the intakes of 26 flavonoids from 5 subclasses; flavonols, flavones, flavanones, flavan-3-ols and anthocyanidins, and the risk of lung, prostate and colorectal cancer. The study population consisted of 2,590 middle-aged eastern Finnish men of the prospective population-based Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. The mean intake of flavonoids was 131.0 +/- 214.7 mg/day. During the mean follow-up time of 16.2 years, 62 lung, 138 prostate, and 55 colorectal cancers occurred. All lung cancer cases occurred among either current smokers (n = 50) or previous smokers (n = 12). After adjustment for age, examination years, body mass index, smoking status, pack-years of smoking, physical activity and intakes of alcohol, total fat, saturated fat, fiber, vitamin C and E, relative risk (RR) for lung cancer was 0.27 (95% CI: 0.11-0.66) for the highest quarter of total flavonoid intake as compared with the lowest quarter. Out of 5 flavonoid subclasses, flavonols and flavan-3-ols were associated with lung cancer, for the highest quarter of intake the RR were 0.29 (95% CI: 0.11-0.78) and 0.24 (95% CI: 0.09-0.64), respectively. No association between flavonoid intake and risk of prostate or colorectal cancer were found. We conclude that high intake of flavonoids is associated with decreased risk of lung cancer in middle-aged Finnish smoking men.
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Anne Hiukka, Jukka Westerbacka, Eeva S Leinonen, Hiroshi Watanabe, Olov Wiklund, Lillemor Mattson Hulten, Jukka T Salonen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Hannele Yki-Järvinen, Anthony C Keech, Marja-Riitta Taskinen (2008)  Long-term effects of fenofibrate on carotid intima-media thickness and augmentation index in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus.   J Am Coll Cardiol 52: 25. 2190-2197 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The aim of this substudy was to ascertain whether long-term treatment with fenofibrate reduces surrogate measures of atherosclerosis, biomarkers of inflammation, and endothelial activation in patients with type 2 diabetes. BACKGROUND: Some fibrates may decrease cardiovascular events, improve endothelial function, and reduce levels of acute-phase proteins. In the FIELD (Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes) study, fenofibrate failed to decrease the primary end point of coronary events in patients with type 2 diabetes. METHODS: A total of 170 patients with type 2 diabetes of the FIELD Helsinki cohort were randomly assigned to micronized fenofibrate 200 mg/day or placebo in a double-blind design. Carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and the augmentation index (a measure of large artery stiffness) were measured at baseline and at second- and fifth-year visits. Plasma levels of interleukin (IL)-6, C-reactive protein (CRP), serum amyloid A (SAA), secretory phospholipase A2 IIA (SPLA2), E-selectin, vascular cellular adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1, and intercellular adhesion molecule (CAM)-1 were determined by commercial enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits at the same visits. RESULTS: IMT and the augmentation index increased similarly in both treatment groups during the study. Plasma levels of CRP, IL-6, SPLA2, SAA, VCAM-1, ICAM-1, and E-selectin remained unchanged in both groups. CONCLUSIONS: Fenofibrate treatment was not associated with beneficial changes in IMT, augmentation index, or biomarkers of inflammation and endothelial function. (Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes; NCT00132886).
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Kai P Savonen, Vesa Kiviniemi, Jari A Laukkanen, Timo A Lakka, Tuomas H Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa (2008)  Chronotropic incompetence and mortality in middle-aged men with known or suspected coronary heart disease.   Eur Heart J 29: 15. 1896-1902 Aug  
Abstract: AIMS: The objective is to study whether a heart rate (HR) increase from 40 to 100% of maximal work capacity in the exercise test (HR40-100) independently predicts mortality in men with known or suspected coronary heart disease (CHD). METHODS AND RESULTS: The subjects were 294 men, 42-61 years of age, from eastern Finland with known or suspected CHD but without use of HR-lowering medication at baseline. HR was measured at rest and during a maximal, symptom-limited exercise test. During an average follow-up of 11.0 years, there were 61 all-cause deaths. In Cox-multivariable model, mortality increased by 41% (95% confidence interval, 12-79%) with a 1-SD (15 b.p.m.) decrement in HR40-100. HR increase from rest to 40% of maximal work capacity was not associated with an increased risk of death. Synergism was observed between HR40-100 and workload achieved at HR of 100 b.p.m. so that men having low values for both these HR variables had a particularly adverse prognosis compared with men with high values for these variables. CONCLUSION: An attenuated HR increase particularly during the latter half of a maximal exercise test is an independent predictor of death in men with known or suspected CHD.
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Arrigo F G Cicero, Simona Nascetti, Maria C López-Sabater, Roberto Elosua, Jukka T Salonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Henrik E Poulsen, Hans-Joachim F Zunft, Holger Kiesewetter, Karina de la Torre, María-Isabel Covas, Jari Kaikkonen, Jaakko Mursu, Corina Koenbick, Hans Bäumler, Antonio V Gaddi (2008)  Changes in LDL fatty acid composition as a response to olive oil treatment are inversely related to lipid oxidative damage: The EUROLIVE study.   J Am Coll Nutr 27: 2. 314-320 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of our study was to assess the changes in the fatty acid composition of low density lipoproteins (LDL) after sustained consumption of olive oil at real-life doses (25 mL/day) and their relationship with lipid oxidative damage. METHODS: A multi-center randomized, cross-over, clinical trial with 3 similar types of olive oils, but with differences in the phenolic content, was conducted on 200 healthy European subjects. Intervention periods were of 3 weeks separated by 2-week washout periods. The LDL fatty acid content was measured in samples drawn at baseline and after the last intervention period. RESULTS: After olive oil ingestion oleic acid concentration in LDL increased (1.9%; p < 0.001) and those of linoleic (1.1%; p < 0.002) and arachidonic acid (0.5%; p < 0.001) decreased. Monounsaturated/polyunsaturated fatty acid and oleic/linoleic acid ratios in LDL increased after olive oil consumption. An inverse relationship between the oleic/linoleic acid ratio and biomarkers of oxidative stress was observed. One unit increase in the oleic/linoleic acid ratio was associated with a decrease of 4.2 microg/L in plasma isoprostanes. CONCLUSION: Consumption of olive oil at real-life doses improved the fatty acid profile in LDL, the changes being associated with a reduction of the oxidative damage to lipids.
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Jaakko Mursu, Sari Voutilainen, Tarja Nurmi, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Sudhir Kurl, Jukka T Salonen (2008)  Flavonoid intake and the risk of ischaemic stroke and CVD mortality in middle-aged Finnish men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Br J Nutr 100: 4. 890-895 Oct  
Abstract: The role of flavonoids in CVD, especially in strokes, is unclear. Our aim was to study the role of flavonoids in CVD. We studied the association between the intakes of five subclasses (flavonols, flavones, flavanones, flavan-3-ols and anthocyanidins), a total of twenty-six flavonoids, on the risk of ischaemic stroke and CVD mortality. The study population consisted of 1950 eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years free of prior CHD or stroke as part of the prospective population-based Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. During an average follow-up time of 15.2 years, 102 ischaemic strokes and 153 CVD deaths occurred. In the Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for age and examination years, BMI,systolic blood pressure, hypertension medication, serum HDL- and LDL-cholesterol, serum TAG, maximal oxygen uptake, smoking, family history of CVD, diabetes, alcohol intake, energy-adjusted intake of folate, vitamin E, total fat and saturated fat intake (percentage of energy), men in the highest quartile of flavonol and flavan-3-ol intakes had a relative risk of 0.55 (95% CI 0.31, 0.99) and 0.59 (95% CI 0.30, 1.14) for ischaemic stroke, respectively, as compared with the lowest quartile. After multivariate adjustment, the relative risk for CVD death in the highest quartile of flavanone and flavone intakes were 0.54 (95% CI 0.32, 0.92) and 0.65 (95% CI 0.40, 1.05), respectively. The present results suggest that high intakes of flavonoids may be associated with decreased risk of ischaemic stroke and possibly with reduced CVD mortality.
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2007
 
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Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Steffen Loft, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Kari Punnonen, Jukka T Salonen, Henrik E Poulsen (2007)  Body iron is a contributor to oxidative damage of DNA.   Free Radic Res 41: 3. 324-328 Mar  
Abstract: The transition metal iron is catalytically highly active in vitro, and not surprisingly, body iron has been suggested to promote oxidative stress in vivo. In the current analysis we studied the association of serum ferritin concentration and serum soluble transferrin receptor concentration with daily urinary 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine excretion, a marker of oxidative stress, in 48 mildly dyslipidemic men in East Finland. In multivariate linear regression analyses allowing for age, smoking, body mass index and physical exercise, serum ferritin concentration predicted the excretion rate at B = 0.17 (95% CI 0.08-0.26, P = 0.001), and serum soluble transferrin receptor to ferritin concentration ratio (TfR/ferritin) predicted the excretion rate at B = - 0.13 (95% CI - 0.21 to - 0.05, P = 0.002). Our data suggest that body iron contributes to excess oxidative stress already at non-iron overload concentrations in these subjects.
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Haibo Zhou, Jianwei Chen, Tiina H Rissanen, Susan A Korrick, Howard Hu, Jukka T Salonen, Matthew P Longnecker (2007)  Outcome-dependent sampling: an efficient sampling and inference procedure for studies with a continuous outcome.   Epidemiology 18: 4. 461-468 Jul  
Abstract: To characterize the relation between an exposure and a continuous outcome, the sampling of subjects can be done much as it is in a case-control study, such that the sample is enriched with subjects who are especially informative. In an outcome-dependent sampling design, observations made on a judiciously chosen subset of the base population can provide nearly the same statistical efficiency as observing the entire base population. Reaping the benefits of such sampling, however, requires use of an analysis that accounts for the outcome-dependent sampling. In this report, we examine the statistical efficiency of a plain random sample analyzed with standard methods, compared with that of data collected with outcome-dependent sampling and analyzed by either of 2 appropriate methods. In addition, 3 real datasets were analyzed using an outcome-dependent sampling approach. The results demonstrate the improved statistical efficiency obtained by using an outcome-dependent sampling, and its applicability in a wide range of settings. This design, coupled with an appropriate analysis, offers a cost-efficient approach to studying the determinants of a continuous outcome.
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Anja Machowetz, Henrik E Poulsen, Sindy Gruendel, Allan Weimann, Montserrat Fitó, Jaume Marrugat, Rafael de la Torre, Jukka T Salonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jaakko Mursu, Simona Nascetti, Antonio Gaddi, Holger Kiesewetter, Hans Bäumler, Hany Selmi, Jari Kaikkonen, Hans-Joachim F Zunft, Maria-Isabel Covas, Corinna Koebnick (2007)  Effect of olive oils on biomarkers of oxidative DNA stress in Northern and Southern Europeans.   FASEB J 21: 1. 45-52 Jan  
Abstract: High consumption of olive oil in the Mediterranean diet has been suggested to protect DNA against oxidative damage and to reduce cancer incidence. We investigated the impact of the phenolic compounds in olive oil, and the oil proper, on DNA and RNA oxidation in North, Central, and South European populations. In a multicenter, double-blind, randomized, controlled crossover intervention trial, the effect of olive oil phenolic content on urinary oxidation products of guanine (8-oxo-guanine, 8-oxo-guanosine and 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine) was investigated. Twenty-five milliliters of three olive oils with low, medium, and high phenolic content were administered to healthy males (n=182) daily for 3 wk. At study baseline the urinary excretion of 8-oxo-guanosine (RNA oxidation) and 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine (DNA oxidation) was higher in the Northern regions of Europe compared with Central and Southern European regions (P=0.035). Urinary excretion of the 8 hydroxylated forms of guanine, guanosine, deoxyguanosine and their nonoxidized forms were not different when comparing olive oils with low, medium, and high phenolic content given for 2 wk. Testing the effect of oil from urinary 8-oxo-deoxyguanosine changes from baseline to post-treatment showed a reduction of DNA oxidation by 13% (P=0.008). These findings support the idea that ingestion of olive oil is beneficial and can reduce the rate of oxidation of DNA. This effect is not due to the phenolic content in the olive oil. The higher DNA and RNA oxidation in Northern European regions compared with that in Central and Southern regions supports the contention that olive oil consumption may explain some of the North-South differences in cancer incidences in Europe.
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Seungmi Yang, John W Lynch, Trivellore E Raghunathan, Jussi Kauhanen, Jukka T Salonen, George A Kaplan (2007)  Socioeconomic and psychosocial exposures across the life course and binge drinking in adulthood: population-based study.   Am J Epidemiol 165: 2. 184-193 Jan  
Abstract: Despite recognition of the health risks of binge drinking, its life-course precursors have not been widely examined. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (1984-1989) were used to investigate the association between socioeconomic and psychosocial exposures across the life course and binge drinking in a population-based sample of 2,316 middle-aged men. Binge drinking was defined as drinking at least four bottles of beer, one bottle of wine, one bottle of strong wine, or six servings of spirits on a single occasion. A composite indicator of childhood socioeconomic position was based on parental education, occupation, and number of rooms and divided into tertiles. Low childhood socioeconomic position increased the odds of binge drinking (odds ratio = 1.70, 95% confidence interval: 1.26, 2.31) when other early life exposures were adjusted. Additional adjustment of adult socioeconomic and psychosocial factors attenuated the odds of bingeing associated with low childhood socioeconomic position (odds ratio = 1.29, 95% confidence interval: 0.93, 1.79). Adult socioeconomic conditions, marital status, hostility, and organizational membership were independently associated with bingeing. This study shows that both early and later life characteristics including socioeconomic conditions and adult psychosocial factors contribute to adult binge drinking in this population, but the effects of adult characteristics are stronger.
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J A Laukkanen, R Rauramaa, J T Salonen, S Kurl (2007)  The predictive value of cardiorespiratory fitness combined with coronary risk evaluation and the risk of cardiovascular and all-cause death.   J Intern Med 262: 2. 263-272 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: There are no data on directly measured cardiorespiratory fitness combined coronary risk evaluation with respect to death from cardiovascular diseases and all-causes. We investigated the prognostic significance of risk scores and cardiorespiratory fitness with respect to cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality. METHODS: Cardiorespiratory fitness (maximal oxygen uptake, VO2peak) was measured by exercise test with an electrically braked cycle ergometer. The study is based on a random population-based sample of 1639 men (42-60 years) without history of type 2 diabetes or atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. RESULTS: During an average follow-up of 16 years, a total of 304 deaths occurred. Independent predictors for all-cause death were European Score (for 1% increment, RR 1.15, 95% CI 1.10-1.20), VO2peak (for 1 MET increment, RR 0.84, 95% CI 0.78-0.89), when adjusted for C-reactive protein, alcohol consumption, serum high-density lipoprotein, waist-to-hip ratio, family history of coronary heart disease, exercise-induced ST changes and the use of medications for hypertension, dyslipidaemia or aspirin. Also, Framingham risk score was related to the risk of death (RR 1.05, 95% CI 1.03-1.07, P < 0.001). Subjects with high European or Framingham score and low VO2peak represent the highest risk group. CONCLUSION: An important finding is that the risk scores can be used to identify men for whom low cardiorespiratory fitness predicts an especially high risk for death from cardiovascular and any other cause.
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Sari Voutilainen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Maarit Korhonen, Jaakko Mursu, Jyrki K Virtanen, Pertti Happonen, Georg Alfthan, Iris Erlund, Kari E North, M J Mosher, Jussi Kauhanen, Jari Tiihonen, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2007)  Functional COMT Val158Met polymorphism, risk of acute coronary events and serum homocysteine: the kuopio ischaemic heart disease risk factor study.   PLoS One 2: 1. 01  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The role of circulating levels of total homocysteine tHcy in the development of coronary heart disease (CHD) is still under debate. One reason for conflicting results between previous studies on homocysteine and heart diseases could be consequence of different interactions between homocysteine and genes in different study populations. Many genetic factors play a role in folate-homocysteine metabolism, like functional polymorphism (Val108Met) in the Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene. METHODOLOGY AND FINDINGS: Our aim was to examine the role of COMT Val158Met polymorphism and interaction of this polymorphism with serum tHcy and folate concentration on the risk of acute coronary and events in middle-aged men from eastern Finland. A population-based prospective cohort of 792 men aged 46-64 years was examined as part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. During an average follow-up of 9.3 years, there were 69 acute coronary events in men with no previous history of CHD. When comparing the COMT low activity genotype with the others, we found an age and examination year adjusted hazard rate ratio (HRR) of 1.73 (95% confidence interval (CI), 1.07-2.79), and an age, examination year, serum LDL and HDL cholesterol, and triglyceride concentration, systolic blood pressure and smoking adjusted HRR of 1.77 (95% CI, 1.05-2.77). Although serum tHcy concentration was not statistically significantly associated with acute coronary events (HRR for the highest third versus others 1.52, 95% CI, 0.93-2.49), subjects with both high serum tHcy and the COMT low activity genotype had an additionally increased adjusted risk of HRR 2.94 (95% CI 1.50-5.76) as compared with other men. CONCLUSIONS: This prospective cohort study suggests that the functional COMT Val158Met polymorphism is associated with increased risk of acute coronary events and it may interact with high serum tHcy levels.
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Jaakko Mursu, Tarja Nurmi, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Anu Ruusunen, Jukka T Salonen, Sari Voutilainen (2007)  The intake of flavonoids and carotid atherosclerosis: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Br J Nutr 98: 4. 814-818 Oct  
Abstract: The role of flavonoids in CVD is still unclear. In this cross-sectional study we assessed the relation between the intakes of twenty-six flavonoids from five subclasses: flavonols, flavones, flavanones, flavan-3-ols and anthocyanidins, and the mean common carotid artery intima-media thickness (CCA-IMT). The study population consisted of 1380 middle-aged eastern Finnish men for whom the mean CCA-IMT examinations were carried out as a part of the prospective population-based Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). The mean intake of flavonoids was 128.5 (sd 206.7) mg/d and the mean CCA-IMT was 0.78 (sd 0.17) mm. In the lowest quartile of total flavonoid intake the non-adjusted mean CCA-IMT was 0.79 (sd 0.19) mm, while the mean CCA-IMT was 0.76 (sd 0.15) in the highest quartile (P < 0.001). After adjustment for age, variables related to CCA-IMT measurement, history of atherosclerosis, smoking, BMI, diabetes, systolic blood pressure, serum HDL- and LDL-cholesterol, VO2 max, and intakes of alcohol, SFA, folate, vitamins C and E, the total flavonoid intake was inversely associated with the mean CCA-IMT (P = 0.018). Out of different flavonoid subclasses, flavan-3-ols were inversely associated with CCA-IMT (P = 0.025) after statistical adjustment. There was a trend for an inverse association between intake of flavonols and mean CCA-IMT (P = 0.055). We conclude that high intake of flavonoids is associated with decreased carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged Finnish men.
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Anita M Tuomainen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jari A Laukkanen, Taina Tervahartiala, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen, Timo Sorsa, Pirkko J Pussinen (2007)  Serum matrix metalloproteinase-8 concentrations are associated with cardiovascular outcome in men.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 27: 12. 2722-2728 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: In culture studies matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-8 thins the protecting fibrous cap of the atherosclerotic plaque thereby increasing its vulnerability. Results on the association of serum MMP-8 concentrations and cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are, however, scarce and contradictory. METHODS AND RESULTS: We analyzed the association between CVD or subclinical atherosclerosis and serum MMP-8 and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase-1 (TIMP-1) concentrations of 1018 men with the follow-up time of 10 years. MMP-8 concentrations or MMP-8/TIMP-1 ratios were higher in men with prevalent CVD or subclinical atherosclerosis at baseline than those without. In men free of CVD at baseline, MMP-8 concentrations associated with acute myocardial infarction, death from coronary heart disease (CHD), CVD, or from any cause with relative risks (RR) (95% CI) of 1.138 (1.009 to 1.284), 1.188 (1.034 to 1.365), 1.171 (1.026 to 1.338), and 1.136 (1.018 to 1.269), respectively, and MMP-8/TIMP-1 ratio with CHD death with an RR of 1.206 (1.028 to 1.414) per standard deviation (SD) increase. In men with no prevalent CVD but with subclinical atherosclerosis at baseline, elevated serum MMP-8 concentration predicted CVD death with an RR of 3.03 (1.09 to 8.44). TIMP-1 concentrations alone had no predictive value. CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that serum MMP-8 concentrations are elevated in prevalent or subclinical atherosclerosis and associate with the worst cardiovascular outcome.
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Jukka T Salonen, Pekka Uimari, Juha-Matti Aalto, Mia Pirskanen, Jari Kaikkonen, Boryana Todorova, Jelena Hyppönen, Veli-Pekka Korhonen, Janne Asikainen, Christopher Devine, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jan Luedemann, Matthias Nauck, Wolfgang Kerner, Richard H Stephens, John P New, William E Ollier, J Martin Gibson, Antony Payton, Michael A Horan, Neil Pendleton, Walt Mahoney, David Meyre, Jerôme Delplanque, Philippe Froguel, Oren Luzzatto, Benjamin Yakir, Ariel Darvasi (2007)  Type 2 diabetes whole-genome association study in four populations: the DiaGen consortium.   Am J Hum Genet 81: 2. 338-345 Aug  
Abstract: Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a common, polygenic chronic disease with high heritability. The purpose of this whole-genome association study was to discover novel T2D-associated genes. We genotyped 500 familial cases and 497 controls with >300,000 HapMap-derived tagging single-nucleotide-polymorphism (SNP) markers. When a stringent statistical correction for multiple testing was used, the only significant SNP was at TCF7L2, which has already been discovered and confirmed as a T2D-susceptibility gene. For a replication study, we selected 10 SNPs in six chromosomal regions with the strongest association (singly or as part of a haplotype) for retesting in an independent case-control set including 2,573 T2D cases and 2,776 controls. The most significant replicated result was found at the AHI1-LOC441171 gene region.
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J Danesh, S Erqou, M Walker, S G Thompson, R Tipping, C Ford, S Pressel, G Walldius, I Jungner, A R Folsom, L E Chambless, M Knuiman, P H Whincup, S G Wannamethee, R W Morris, J Willeit, S Kiechl, P Santer, A Mayr, N Wald, S Ebrahim, D A Lawlor, J W G Yarnell, J Gallacher, E Casiglia, V Tikhonoff, P J Nietert, S E Sutherland, D L Bachman, J E Keil, M Cushman, B M Psaty, R P Tracy, A Tybjaerg-Hansen, B G Nordestgaard, R Frikke-Schmidt, S Giampaoli, L Palmieri, S Panico, D Vanuzzo, L Pilotto, L Simons, J McCallum, Y Friedlander, F G R Fowkes, A J Lee, F B Smith, J Taylor, J Guralnik, C Phillips, R Wallace, D Blazer, K T Khaw, J H Jansson, C Donfrancesco, V Salomaa, K Harald, P Jousilahti, E Vartiainen, M Woodward, R B D'Agostino, P A Wolf, R S Vasan, M J Pencina, E M Bladbjerg, T Jorgensen, L Moller, J Jespersen, R Dankner, A Chetrit, F Lubin, A Rosengren, L Wilhelmsen, G Lappas, H Eriksson, C Bjorkelund, P Cremer, D Nagel, R Tilvis, T Strandberg, B Rodriguez, L M Bouter, R J Heine, J M Dekker, G Nijpels, C D A Stehouwer, E Rimm, J Pai, S Sato, H Iso, A Kitamura, H Noda, U Goldbourt, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, T - P Tuomainen, D Deeg, J L Poppelaars, T Meade, J Cooper, B Hedblad, G Berglund, G Engstrom, A Döring, W Koenig, C Meisinger, W Mraz, L Kuller, R Selmer, A Tverdal, W Nystad, R Gillum, M Mussolino, S Hankinson, J Manson, B De Stavola, C Knottenbelt, J A Cooper, K A Bauer, R D Rosenberg, Y Naito, I Holme, H Nakagawa, H Miura, P Ducimetiere, X Jouven, C Crespo, M Garcia-Palmieri, P Amouyel, D Arveiler, A Evans, J Ferrieres, H Schulte, G Assmann, J Shepherd, C Packard, N Sattar, B Cantin, B Lamarche, J - P Després, G R Dagenais, E Barrett-Connor, D Wingard, R Bettencourt, V Gudnason, T Aspelund, G Sigurdsson, B Thorsson, M Trevisan, J Witteman, I Kardys, M Breteler, A Hofman, H Tunstall-Pedoe, R Tavendale, G D O Lowe, Y Ben-Shlomo, B V Howard, Y Zhang, L Best, J Umans, A Onat, T W Meade, I Njolstad, E Mathiesen, M L Lochen, T Wilsgaard, J M Gaziano, M Stampfer, P Ridker, H Ulmer, G Diem, H Concin, F Rodeghiero, A Tosetto, E Brunner, M Shipley, J Buring, S M Cobbe, I Ford, M Robertson, Y He, A M Ibanez, E J M Feskens, D Kromhout, R Collins, E Di Angelantonio, S Kaptoge, S Lewington, L Orfei, L Pennells, P Perry, K Ray, N Sarwar, M Scherman, A Thompson, S Watson, F Wensley, I R White, A M Wood (2007)  The Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration: analysis of individual data on lipid, inflammatory and other markers in over 1.1 million participants in 104 prospective studies of cardiovascular diseases.   Eur J Epidemiol 22: 12. 839-869 09  
Abstract: Many long-term prospective studies have reported on associations of cardiovascular diseases with circulating lipid markers and/or inflammatory markers. Studies have not, however, generally been designed to provide reliable estimates under different circumstances and to correct for within-person variability. The Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration has established a central database on over 1.1 million participants from 104 prospective population-based studies, in which subsets have information on lipid and inflammatory markers, other characteristics, as well as major cardiovascular morbidity and cause-specific mortality. Information on repeat measurements on relevant characteristics has been collected in approximately 340,000 participants to enable estimation of and correction for within-person variability. Re-analysis of individual data will yield up to approximately 69,000 incident fatal or nonfatal first ever major cardiovascular outcomes recorded during about 11.7 million person years at risk. The primary analyses will involve age-specific regression models in people without known baseline cardiovascular disease in relation to fatal or nonfatal first ever coronary heart disease outcomes. This initiative will characterize more precisely and in greater detail than has previously been possible the shape and strength of the age- and sex-specific associations of several lipid and inflammatory markers with incident coronary heart disease outcomes (and, secondarily, with other incident cardiovascular outcomes) under a wide range of circumstances. It will, therefore, help to determine to what extent such associations are independent from possible confounding factors and to what extent such markers (separately and in combination) provide incremental predictive value.
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Niklas Krause, Richard J Brand, George A Kaplan, Jussi Kauhanen, Smriti Malla, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen (2007)  Occupational physical activity, energy expenditure and 11-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Scand J Work Environ Health 33: 6. 405-424 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study prospectively assessed the effects of occupational physical activity on atherosclerosis progression. METHODS: This population-based prospective study of ultrasonographically assessed carotid intima media thickness (IMT) used repeated measures of occupational physical activity during baseline, 4-year, and 11-year examinations of 612 Finnish men 42-60 years of age at baseline. The association between five measures of energy expenditure and the 11-year change in maximum IMT was evaluated in regression models adjusting for 21 potential confounders, including biological factors, leisure-time physical activity, smoking, socioeconomic status, psychosocial job factors, and baseline health status. RESULTS: At baseline, 31% of all the men and 51% of those with ischemic heart disease (IHD) exceeded the recommended maximum levels of relative aerobic strain. All five measures of energy expenditure were significantly associated with adjusted 11-year IMT change. Significant interactions were found between IHD and several measures of energy expenditure. Maximum relative aerobic strain resulted in a 90% increase in IMT among the men with IHD compared with a 46% increase among those without IHD. The men with preexisting carotid stenosis also had higher rates of IMT progression than the men without this condition. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that high energy expenditures at work are associated with an accelerated progression of atherosclerosis even after control for virtually all known cardiovascular risk factors, especially among older workers and workers with preexisting IHD or carotid artery stenosis. The findings support the hemodynamic theory of atherosclerosis and have important implications for workplace surveillance and disease prevention.
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Jouni Karppi, Tiina H Rissanen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jari Kaikkonen, Anders G Olsson, Sari Voutilainen, Jukka T Salonen (2007)  Effects of astaxanthin supplementation on lipid peroxidation.   Int J Vitam Nutr Res 77: 1. 3-11 Jan  
Abstract: Astaxanthin, the main carotenoid pigment in aquatic animals, has greater antioxidant activity in vitro (protecting against lipid peroxidation) and a more polar configuration than other carotenoids.We investigated the effect of three-month astaxanthin supplementation on lipid peroxidation in healthy non-smoking Finnish men, aged 19-33 years by using a randomized double-blind study design. Also absorption of astaxanthin from capsules into bloodstream and its safety were evaluated. The intervention group received two 4-mg astaxanthin (Astaxin) capsules daily, and the control group two identical-looking placebo capsules. Astaxanthin supplementation elevated plasma astaxanthin levels to 0.032 pmol/L (p < 0.001 for the change compared with the placebo group). We observed that levels of plasma 12- and 15-hydroxy fatty acids were reduced statistically significantly in the astaxanthin group (p = 0.048 and p = 0.047 respectively) during supplementation, but not in the placebo group and the change of 15-hydroxy fatty acid was almost significantly greater (p = 0.056) in the astaxanthin group, as compared with the placebo group. The present study suggests that intestinal absorption of astaxanthin delivered as capsules is adequate, and well tolerated. Supplementation with astaxanthin may decrease in vivo oxidation of fatty acids in healthy men.
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Kai P Savonen, Timo A Lakka, Jari A Laukkanen, Tuomas H Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa (2007)  Effectiveness of workload at the heart rate of 100 beats/min in predicting cardiovascular mortality in men aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years at baseline.   Am J Cardiol 100: 4. 563-568 Aug  
Abstract: The magnitude of work an individual is able to perform at the heart rate (HR) of 100 beats/min (WL(100)) is a simple, integrated measure of HR at rest, HR response to light dynamic exercise, as well as cardiorespiratory performance. Because a high HR at rest and a low cardiorespiratory performance are previously established risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality, it can be deduced that WL(100) is a potential predictor of CVD and coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether WL(100) independently predicts CVD and CHD mortality in middle-aged men. The subjects were a representative sample of 1,314 middle-aged men who did not have CHD and did not use HR-lowering medication at baseline. The association of WL(100) with CVD and CHD mortality was examined by Cox regression models with backward stepwise selection, including numerous known risk factors for CVD death. During an average follow-up of 11.5 years, there were 51 CVD deaths, of which 35 were due to CHD. In Cox multivariable models, CVD mortality increased by 72% (95% confidence interval 27% to 138%, p = 0.001) and CHD mortality by 89% (95% confidence interval 28% to 178%, p = 0.001) with 1 SD (31 W) decrement in WL(100). WL(100) improved the predictive power of the adjusted Cox models, including other HR-derived and exercise test variables. In conclusion, WL(100) predicts CVD and CHD mortality in men without previous CHD. The association of WL(100) with CVD and CHD mortality is not explained by maximal cardiorespiratory performance.
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Jyrki K Virtanen, Sari Voutilainen, Tiina H Rissanen, Pertti Happonen, Jaakko Mursu, Jari A Laukkanen, Henrik Poulsen, Timo A Lakka, Jukka T Salonen (2006)  High dietary methionine intake increases the risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men.   Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis 16: 2. 113-120 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIM: Homocysteine, a methionine metabolite, is suggested to be a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD). To date, the effects of dietary intake of methionine, the key amino acid in homocysteine metabolism, on CVD have not been studied. Our aim was to examine the effects of dietary methionine intake on the risk of acute coronary events. METHODS AND RESULTS: We examined the effects of dietary methionine intake, assessed with 4-d food record, on acute coronary events in a prospective cohort study consisting of 1981 coronary disease free men from eastern Finland, aged 42-60 years at baseline in 1984-89, in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. During an average follow-up time of 14.0 years, 292 subjects experienced an acute coronary event. In a Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for age, examination years, BMI, urinary nicotine metabolites and protein intake (excluding methionine) the relative risks of acute coronary event in the three highest quarters of dietary methionine intake were 1.31 (95% CI: 0.92, 1.86), 1.31 (95% CI: 0.88, 1.96) and 2.08 (95% CI: 1.31, 3.29) as compared with the lowest quarter. Further adjustments did not change the results. However, opposite association was observed with total protein intake, which tended to decrease the risk. CONCLUSIONS: The main finding of this study is that long-term, moderately high dietary methionine intake may increase the risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged Finnish men free of prior CHD. More prospective research is needed to confirm the role of dietary methionine in the development of CVD, and whether its effects are independent of homocysteine.
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Sudhir Kurl, Jari A Laukkanen, Leo Niskanen, David Laaksonen, Juhani Sivenius, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jukka T Salonen (2006)  Metabolic syndrome and the risk of stroke in middle-aged men.   Stroke 37: 3. 806-811 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The metabolic syndrome, a clustering of disturbed glucose and insulin metabolism, obesity and abdominal fat distribution, dyslipidemia, and hypertension is associated with cardiovascular diseases. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship of metabolic syndrome, as defined by National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) and World Health Organization (WHO) criteria, with the risk for stroke. METHODS: Population-based cohort study with an average follow-up of 14.3 years from eastern Finland. A total of 1131 men with no history of cardiovascular disease and diabetes at baseline participated. Sixty-five strokes occurred, of which 47 were ischemic strokes. RESULTS: Men with the metabolic syndrome as defined by the NCEP criteria had a 2.05-fold (95% CI, 1.03 to 4.11; P=0.042) risk for all strokes and 2.41-fold (95% CI, 1.12 to 5.32; P=0.025) risk for ischemic stroke, after adjusting for socioeconomic status, smoking, alcohol, and family history of coronary heart disease. Additional adjustment for ischemic changes during exercise test, serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, plasma fibrinogen, energy intake for saturated fats, energy expenditure of leisure time physical activity, and white blood cell count, the results remained significant. The risk ratios among men with metabolic syndrome as defined by the WHO criteria were 1.82 (95% CI, 1.01 to 3.26; P=0.046) for all strokes and 2.16 (95% CI, 1.11 to 4.19; P=0.022) for ischemic stroke. After further adjustment, the respective risks were 2.08 (95% CI, 1.12 to 3.87; P=0.020) and 2.47 (95% CI, 1.21 to 5.07; P=0.013). CONCLUSIONS: The risk of any stroke is increased in men with metabolic syndrome, in the absence of stroke, diabetes and cardiovascular disease at baseline. Prevention of the metabolic syndrome presents a great challenge for clinicians with respect to stroke.
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Kai P Savonen, Timo A Lakka, Jari A Laukkanen, Pirjo M Halonen, Tuomas H Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa (2006)  Heart rate response during exercise test and cardiovascular mortality in middle-aged men.   Eur Heart J 27: 5. 582-588 Mar  
Abstract: AIMS: The objective is to study whether a heart rate (HR) response during exercise test independently predicts cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality. METHODS AND RESULTS: The subjects were a representative sample of 1378 men, 42-61 years of age, from eastern Finland with neither prior coronary heart disease (CHD) nor use of beta-blockers at baseline. HR was measured at rest and during a maximal, symptom-limited exercise test at 20, 40, 60, 80, and 100% of maximal workload. During an average follow-up of 11.4 years, there were 56 deaths due to CVD. The slope of HR increase during exercise test was steeper in survivors when compared with those who died due to CVD during follow-up (P<0.001), and the difference in the steepness of HR slope between the groups was the strongest at interval 40-100% (P<0.001). In Cox-multivariable models, maximal HR-HR at 40% workload as a continuous variable was inversely associated with CVD (P=0.04), CHD (P=0.004), and all-cause (P=0.002) mortality after adjustment for known risk factors for CVD death. CONCLUSION: By considering an HR response throughout an exercise test, we found that a blunted HR increase at 40-100% of maximal workload was associated with increased CVD mortality.
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J A Laukkanen, S Kurl, J T Salonen, T A Lakka, R Rauramaa (2006)  Peak oxygen pulse during exercise as a predictor for coronary heart disease and all cause death.   Heart 92: 9. 1219-1224 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate the prognostic value of peak oxygen pulse, which is the amount of oxygen consumed per heart beat during exercise, and to compare the prognostic value of peak oxygen pulse and maximum oxygen uptake (Vo(2max)) with respect to coronary heart disease (CHD) and overall death. DESIGN: Prospective population-based study based on 1596 men without CHD or the use of beta blockers at baseline. RESULTS: The risk of CHD was 2.45 (95% CI 1.10 to 5.45) times higher in men with low peak oxygen pulse (< 13.5 ml/beat) than in those with high peak oxygen pulse (> 17.8 ml/beat) after adjustment for age, alcohol consumption, smoking, body mass index, blood pressure, serum lipids, diabetes, family history of CHD and ischaemic ST changes during exercise. During an average follow up of 14 years, 267 men died, 67 of them due to CHD. The respective risk for overall death was 1.79 (95% CI 1.21 to 2.65). The continuous variable Vo(2max) was a stronger risk predictor than peak oxygen pulse for CHD and overall death. CONCLUSIONS: Assessment of oxygen pulse provides no complementary information to Vo(2max) about cardiorespiratory fitness and prognosis for CHD. The analysis of respiratory gas exchange including the assessment of oxygen pulse during exercise does, however, provide an additional means for defining prognosis for patients with CHD.
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Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Minna Ala-Kopsala, Olli Vuolteenaho, Heikki Ruskoaho, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jukka T Salonen (2006)  Plasma N-terminal fragments of natriuretic propeptides predict the risk of cardiovascular events and mortality in middle-aged men.   Eur Heart J 27: 10. 1230-1237 May  
Abstract: AIMS: The prognostic significance of N-terminal pro-A-type (NT-proANP) and pro-B-type natriuretic peptides (NT-proBNP) is not well documented in population-based prospective studies. We, therefore, studied if both NT-proANP and NT-proBNP are predictive for overall death, cardiovascular events, and atrial fibrillation (AF) among middle-aged men without heart failure or AF at baseline. METHODS AND RESULTS: Plasma NT-proANP and NT-proBNP were measured in a representative population-based sample of 905 men (age 46-65 years) from eastern Finland. There were 110 deaths [58 cardiovascular and 40 coronary heart disease (CHD)] and 59 cases of AF during a follow-up of 10 years. The multivariable adjusted risk for overall was 1.35-fold (95% CI 1.15-1.57) and 1.52-fold (95% CI 1.21-1.91) for CHD death for each SD (160.8 pmol/L) increment in NT-proANP. The respective risks were 1.26-fold (95% CI 1.12-1.42) and 1.44-fold (95% CI 1.22-1.60) for each SD (58.9 pmol/L) increment in NT-proBNP. The adjusted risks for future AF were 1.46 (P<0.001) and 1.72-fold (P<0.001) for each SD increment in NT-proANP and NT-proBNP, respectively. CONCLUSION: The main finding of the present study is that NT-proANP and NT-proBNP are strong predictors of death from cardiovascular and other causes including AF. These natriuretic peptides add to the prognostic value of conventional risk factors and provide a non-invasive measure for identifying men with high risk of death and its co-morbidities.
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Anna Nurmi, Jaakko Mursu, Tarja Nurmi, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Georg Alfthan, Raimo Hiltunen, Jari Kaikkonen, Jukka T Salonen, Sari Voutilainen (2006)  Consumption of juice fortified with oregano extract markedly increases excretion of phenolic acids but lacks short- and long-term effects on lipid peroxidation in healthy nonsmoking men.   J Agric Food Chem 54: 16. 5790-5796 Aug  
Abstract: Oregano has been shown to possess antioxidant capacity in various in vitro models and has thus been suggested to be potentially beneficial to human health, but studies in humans are lacking. The aim of this study was to investigate the bioavailability and the effects of Origanum vulgare extract supplementation on serum lipids and lipid peroxidation in healthy nonsmoking men. A four-week double-blinded supplementation trial was concluded in which volunteers (n = 45) were randomized to consume daily mango-orange juice (placebo), mango-orange juice enriched with 300 mg/d total phenolic compounds from oregano extract, or mango-orange juice enriched with 600 mg/d total phenolic compounds from oregano extract. The excretion of phenolic compounds was markedly increased in the higher phenolic group as compared to the placebo group, but no significant changes were observed in the safety parameters, serum lipids, or biomarkers of lipid peroxidation.
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T Tolmunen, J A Laukkanen, J Hintikka, S Kurl, H Viinamäki, R Salonen, J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2006)  Low maximal oxygen uptake is associated with elevated depressive symptoms in middle-aged men.   Eur J Epidemiol 21: 9. 701-706 10  
Abstract: A low level of physical activity has been associated with depression, and increased physical activity has been found to have a positive effect on mood. However, the association between maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2max)) and mood has been poorly studied. In this study VO(2max) (ml/kg per min) was measured in a sample of 1,519 men aged 46-61 years during a cycle ergometer test by using respiratory gas exchange. Men with a history of psychiatric disorder or serious physical illness were excluded. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the 18-item Human Population Laboratory Depression Scale (HPL). Those who scored 5 or more in the HPL were considered to have elevated depressive symptoms.The participants were classified into quartiles according to the VO(2max). Those in the lowest quartile had a more than 3-fold (OR: 3.42; 95% CI: 1.65-7.09; p < 0.001) higher risk of having elevated depressive symptoms compared with those in the highest quartile, even after adjusting for several confounders (OR: 3.38; 95% CI: 1.60-7.14; p < 0.001).In conclusion, low VO(2max) is associated with having elevated depressive symptoms in middle-aged men.
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Pertti Happonen, Sari Voutilainen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen (2006)  Catechol-o-methyltransferase gene polymorphism modifies the effect of coffee intake on incidence of acute coronary events.   PLoS One 1: 12  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The role of coffee intake as a risk factor for coronary heart disease (CHD) has been debated for decades. We examined whether the relationship between coffee intake and incidence of CHD events is dependent on the metabolism of circulating catecholamines, as determined by functional polymorphism of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In a cohort of 773 men who were 42 to 60 years old and free of symptomatic CHD at baseline in 1984-89, 78 participants experienced an acute coronary event during an average follow-up of 13 years. In logistic regression adjusting for age, smoking, family history of CHD, vitamin C deficiency, blood pressure, plasma cholesterol concentration, and diabetes, the odds ratio (90% confidence interval) comparing heavy coffee drinkers with the low activity COMT genotype with those with the high activity or heterozygotic genotypes was 3.2 (1.2-8.4). Urinary adrenaline excretion increased with increasing coffee intake, being over two-fold in heavy drinkers compared with nondrinkers (p = 0.008 for trend). CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Heavy coffee consumption increases the incidence of acute coronary events in men with low but not high COMT activity. Further studies are required to determine to which extent circulating catecholamines mediate the relationship between coffee intake and CHD.
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Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Rainer Rauramaa, Timo A Lakka, Juha M Venäläinen, Jukka T Salonen (2006)  Systolic blood pressure response to exercise testing is related to the risk of acute myocardial infarction in middle-aged men.   Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil 13: 3. 421-428 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: We assessed the association of systolic blood pressure response to exercise with the risk of an acute myocardial infarction. DESIGN: We conducted a population-based follow-up study. METHODS: This study was based on 1731 middle-aged men without history of coronary heart disease who underwent a cycle ergometer exercise test. Systolic blood pressure was measured every 2 min during a cycle ergometer exercise test in 1731 men followed for 12.7 years on average. A total of 188 acute myocardial infarctions were observed. RESULTS: The total change in systolic blood pressure, the slope of the rise in systolic blood pressure per minute and maximal systolic blood pressure during exercise in quintiles were related to the risk of acute myocardial infarction. Maximal systolic blood pressure of over 230 mmHg was associated with a 2.47 [95% confidence interval (CI) 1.46-4.18] fold risk of acute myocardial infarction, after adjustment for age, other risk factors including the use of antihypertensive medications and systolic blood pressure at rest. Among men with elevated systolic blood pressure at rest, the relative risk for an acute myocardial infarction was 4.31 (95% CI 2.04-9.07) times higher for those who had a steep slope of systolic blood pressure rise (>9.4 mmHg per min of exercise) as compared with those who had a more gradual rise in systolic blood pressure. CONCLUSIONS: Both rate and levels of rise in systolic blood pressure during a progressive exercise test were risk predictors for acute myocardial infarction. These measurements provide an incremental predictive value for an acute myocardial infarction to elevated resting systolic blood pressure, emphasizing the importance of regular blood pressure measurements during exercise testing.
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PMID 
María-Isabel Covas, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Henrik E Poulsen, Jari Kaikkonen, Hans-Joachim F Zunft, Holger Kiesewetter, Antonio Gaddi, Rafael de la Torre, Jaakko Mursu, Hans Bäumler, Simona Nascetti, Jukka T Salonen, Montserrat Fitó, Jyrki Virtanen, Jaume Marrugat, EUROLIVE Study Group (2006)  The effect of polyphenols in olive oil on heart disease risk factors: a randomized trial.   Ann Intern Med 145: 5. 333-341 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Virgin olive oils are richer in phenolic content than refined olive oil. Small, randomized, crossover, controlled trials on the antioxidant effect of phenolic compounds from real-life daily doses of olive oil in humans have yielded conflicting results. Little information is available on the effect of the phenolic compounds of olive oil on plasma lipid levels. No international study with a large sample size has been done. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate whether the phenolic content of olive oil further benefits plasma lipid levels and lipid oxidative damage compared with monounsaturated acid content. DESIGN: Randomized, crossover, controlled trial. SETTING: 6 research centers from 5 European countries. PARTICIPANTS: 200 healthy male volunteers. MEASUREMENTS: Glucose levels, plasma lipid levels, oxidative damage to lipid levels, and endogenous and exogenous antioxidants at baseline and before and after each intervention. INTERVENTION: In a crossover study, participants were randomly assigned to 3 sequences of daily administration of 25 mL of 3 olive oils. Olive oils had low (2.7 mg/kg of olive oil), medium (164 mg/kg), or high (366 mg/kg) phenolic content but were otherwise similar. Intervention periods were 3 weeks preceded by 2-week washout periods. RESULTS: A linear increase in high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels was observed for low-, medium-, and high-polyphenol olive oil: mean change, 0.025 mmol/L (95% CI, 0.003 to 0.05 mmol/L), 0.032 mmol/L (CI, 0.005 to 0.05 mmol/L), and 0.045 mmol/L (CI, 0.02 to 0.06 mmol/L), respectively. Total cholesterol-HDL cholesterol ratio decreased linearly with the phenolic content of the olive oil. Triglyceride levels decreased by an average of 0.05 mmol/L for all olive oils. Oxidative stress markers decreased linearly with increasing phenolic content. Mean changes for oxidized low-density lipoprotein levels were 1.21 U/L (CI, -0.8 to 3.6 U/L), -1.48 U/L (-3.6 to 0.6 U/L), and -3.21 U/L (-5.1 to -0.8 U/L) for the low-, medium-, and high-polyphenol olive oil, respectively. LIMITATIONS: The olive oil may have interacted with other dietary components, participants' dietary intake was self-reported, and the intervention periods were short. CONCLUSIONS: Olive oil is more than a monounsaturated fat. Its phenolic content can also provide benefits for plasma lipid levels and oxidative damage. International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial number: ISRCTN09220811.
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David E Laaksonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Leo Niskanen, Tiina H Rissanen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Prediction of cardiovascular mortality in middle-aged men by dietary and serum linoleic and polyunsaturated fatty acids.   Arch Intern Med 165: 2. 193-199 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Substitution of dietary polyunsaturated for saturated fat has long been recommended for the primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (CVD), but only a few prospective cohort studies have provided support for this advice. METHODS: We assessed the association of dietary linoleic and total polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) intake with cardiovascular and overall mortality in a population-based cohort of 1551 middle-aged men. Dietary fat composition was estimated with a 4-day food record and serum fatty acid composition. RESULTS: During the 15-year follow-up, 78 men died of CVD and 225 of any cause. Total fat intake was not related to CVD or overall mortality. Men with an energy-adjusted dietary intake of linoleic acid (relative risk [RR] 0.39; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.21-0.71) and PUFA (RR, 0.38; 95% CI, 0.20-0.70) in the upper third were less likely to die of CVD than men with intake in the lower third after adjustment for age. Multivariate adjustment weakened the association somewhat. Mortality from CVD was also lower for men with proportions of serum esterified linoleic acid (RR, 0.42; 95% CI, 0.21-0.80) and PUFA (RR, 0.25; 95% CI, 0.12-0.50) in the upper vs lower third, with some attenuation in multivariate analyses. Serum and to a lesser extent dietary linoleic acid and PUFA were also inversely associated with overall mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Dietary polyunsaturated and more specifically linoleic fatty acid intake may have a substantial cardioprotective benefit that is also reflected in overall mortality. Dietary fat quality seems more important than fat quantity in the reduction of cardiovascular mortality in men.
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Pirkko J Pussinen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Georg Alfthan, Riitta Salonen, Jari A Laukkanen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Serum antibody levels to Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans predict the risk for coronary heart disease.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 25: 4. 833-838 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The association between serum antibody levels to major periodontal pathogens and coronary heart disease (CHD) was analyzed in a prospective population-based study. METHODS AND RESULTS: The population comprised 1023 men (aged 46 to 64 years) in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Study. The subjects with CHD at baseline (n=113) were more often seropositive for Porphyromonas gingivalis IgA (38.9% versus 28.5%, P=0.021) and IgG (60.2% versus 46.7%, P=0.007) than those without CHD. During the 10-year follow-up, 109 men free from CHD at baseline experienced an acute myocardial infarction or CHD death. The men with an end point were more often seropositive for Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans IgA (15.5% versus 10.2%, P=0.019) than those who remained healthy. In the highest tertile of A. actinomycetemcomitans IgA-antibodies compared with the lowest one, the relative risk (RR) for an end point adjusted for CHD risk factors was 2.0 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.2 to 3.3). In the Porphyromonas gingivalis IgA-antibody tertiles, the highest RR of 2.1 (1.3 to 3.4) was observed in the second tertile. All antibody levels correlated positively with the carotid artery intima-media thickness. CONCLUSIONS: High-serum antibody levels to major periodontal pathogens are associated with subclinical, prevalent, and future incidence of CHD. Periodontal pathogens or host response against them may contribute to the pathogenesis of CHD.
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S Kurl, J A Laukkanen, L Niskanen, R Rauramaa, T P Tuomainen, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2005)  Cardiac power during exercise and the risk of stroke in men.   Stroke 36: 4. 820-824 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Low maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) has been shown to predict the risk of stroke. However, VO2max does not take into account the differences in cardiac afterload between subjects. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship of exercise cardiac power (ECP), defined as a ratio of VO2max with peak systolic blood pressure (SBP) during exercise, with the risk for stroke. METHODS: Population-based cohort study with an average follow-up of 12 years from eastern Finland. A total of 1761 men with no history of stroke or coronary heart disease at baseline participated. Among these men, 91 strokes occurred, of which 69 were attributable to ischemic causes. RESULTS: The relative risk of any stroke in men with low ECP (<10.3 mL/mm Hg) was 2.7 (95% CI, 1.2 to 6.0; P=0.01; P=0.02 for the trend across the quartiles), and the relative risk for ischemic stroke was 2.7 (95% CI, 1.1 to 7.0; P=0.03; P=0.04 for trend across the quartiles) compared with men having high ECP (>14.3 mL/mm Hg) during exercise after adjusting for age, examination year, cigarette smoking, alcohol consumption, body mass index, diabetes, serum total cholesterol level, energy expenditure of physical activity, exercise-induced myocardial ischemia, and the use of antihypertensive medication. After further adjustment for resting SBP, results were statistically nonsignificant. CONCLUSIONS: Low ECP provides noninvasive and easily available measure for stroke risk. One of the most potential explanations for the association between ECP and the increased risk of stroke is an elevated afterload and peripheral resistance indicated by elevated SBP.
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Jaakko Mursu, Sari Voutilainen, Tarja Nurmi, Georg Alfthan, Jyrki K Virtanen, Tiina H Rissanen, Pertti Happonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jari Kaikkonen, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  The effects of coffee consumption on lipid peroxidation and plasma total homocysteine concentrations: a clinical trial.   Free Radic Biol Med 38: 4. 527-534 Feb  
Abstract: Despite extensive research, the cardiovascular effects of coffee consumption in humans remain controversial. Our aim was to investigate the excretion of coffee phenols and the effects of filtered coffee consumption on oxidative stress and plasma homocysteine (tHcy) concentration in humans. The study consisted of a multiple-dose clinical supplementation trial and a single-dose study. In the long-term trial, 43 healthy nonsmoking men optionally consumed daily either no coffee, 3 cups (450 mL), or 6 cups (900 mL) of filtered coffee for 3 weeks, while in the short-term study 35 subjects consumed a single dose of 0, 1 (150 mL), or 2 cups (300 mL) of coffee. Long-term consumption of coffee increased the urinary excretion of caffeic and ferulic acid. The change in the total excretion of phenolic acids in 3 and 6 cups groups represented 3.8 and 2.5% of the amount ingested daily. Plasma tHcy concentrations increased nonsignificantly, but the consumption of coffee had neither short-nor long-term effects on lipid peroxidation or the activity of measured antioxidant enzymes. In conclusion, the consumption of filtered coffee does not have any detectable effects on lipid peroxidation in healthy nonsmoking men. The effect of coffee consumption on tHcy concentrations needs further investigation.
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Fareeza Akbar, Seppo Heinonen, Mia Pirskanen, Pekka Uimari, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Haplotypic association of DDAH1 with susceptibility to pre-eclampsia.   Mol Hum Reprod 11: 1. 73-77 Jan  
Abstract: Association between pre-eclampsia (PEE1) and the dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH) 1 and 2 genes, which play a role in the regulation of nitric oxide synthesis and release, was studied. In a case-control study design single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were determined at eight sites in the DDAH1 gene and at one site (Pro231Pro) in the DDAH2 gene from 132 women with pre-eclampsia and 112 healthy controls. Three SNPs in the DDAH1 gene were associated with pre-eclampsia, showing complete linkage disequilibrium with each other, but none of the associations in the allele or genotype data reached statistical significance in either of the genes after the correction for multiple testing. Haplotype frequencies were estimated using a population based on a maximum likelihood method (EM algorithm). Four common DDAH1 haplotypes were present and a significant association of haplotypes H2 and H3 with pre-eclampsia (P=0.03) was found. The risk of pre-eclampsia was greatest in individuals (odds ratio: 3.93; 95% confidence interval: 1.54-9.99) who had two copies of the high-risk haplotypes (H2 or H3). The observed haplotypic association provides the first evidence of the importance of DDAH1 polymorphisms in pre-eclampsia susceptibility.
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J K Virtanen, S Voutilainen, G Alfthan, M J Korhonen, T H Rissanen, J Mursu, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2005)  Homocysteine as a risk factor for CVD mortality in men with other CVD risk factors: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study.   J Intern Med 257: 3. 255-262 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Based on case-control and prospective studies elevated blood total homocysteine (tHcy) has been suggested to be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD). The purpose of the study was to explore the joint effect of increased serum tHcy concentration and other risk factors on the risk of CVD mortality in middle-aged men without a history of heart disease or stroke. DESIGN: A prospective, population-based Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. SETTING: Eastern Finland. Subjects. A total of 802 men aged 46-64 years, examined in 1991-93. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: CVD mortality event. RESULTS: The mean serum tHcy concentration was 10.8 micromol L(-1) (SD 3.3). During the average follow-up time of 10.8 years 50 men experienced a CVD death. The hazard rate ratio for CVD mortality was 1.80 (95% confidence interval: 1.02-3.19) in men in the highest serum tHcy third versus lower thirds after adjustment for cardiovascular risk factors. Furthermore, elevated serum tHcy concentration appeared to increase the risk of CVD death in men who smoke or who have high circulating concentrations of serum total or LDL cholesterol, apo-B apolipoprotein or plasma fibrinogen. CONCLUSION: We conclude that homocysteine may increase the risk of CVD mortality in middle-aged men from Eastern Finland, and it may especially increase the risk when present with other risk factors for CVD.
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Jyrki K Virtanen, Sari Voutilainen, Tiina H Rissanen, Jaakko Mursu, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Maarit J Korhonen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Kari Seppänen, Jari A Laukkanen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Mercury, fish oils, and risk of acute coronary events and cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, and all-cause mortality in men in eastern Finland.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 25: 1. 228-233 Jan  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Mercury has been suggested to have negative effects on cardiovascular health. We investigated the effects of high mercury content in hair on the risk of acute coronary events and cardiovascular and all-cause mortality in men from eastern Finland. METHODS AND RESULTS: The population-based prospective Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) cohort of 1871 Finnish men aged 42 to 60 years and free of previous coronary heart disease (CHD) or stroke at baseline was used. During an average follow-up time of 13.9 years, 282 acute coronary events and 132 cardiovascular disease (CVD), 91 CHD, and 525 all-cause deaths occurred. Men in the highest third of hair mercury content (>2.03 microg/g) had an adjusted 1.60-fold (95% CI, 1.24 to 2.06) risk of acute coronary event, 1.68-fold (95% CI, 1.15 to 2.44) risk of CVD, 1.56-fold (95% CI, 0.99 to 2.46) risk of CHD, and 1.38-fold (95% CI, 1.15 to 1.66) risk of any death compared with men in the lower two thirds. High mercury content in hair also attenuated the protective effects of high-serum docosahexaenoic acid plus docosapentaenoic acid concentration. CONCLUSIONS: High content of mercury in hair may be a risk factor for acute coronary events and CVD, CHD, and all-cause mortality in middle-aged eastern Finnish men. Mercury may also attenuate the protective effects of fish on cardiovascular health.
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M Karpansalo, J Kauhanen, T A Lakka, P Manninen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2005)  Depression and early retirement: prospective population based study in middle aged men.   J Epidemiol Community Health 59: 1. 70-74 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Mental depression is an important health problem in many countries. It reduces productivity at work and is the fastest increasing reason for early retirement. METHODS: This study followed up a Finnish cohort of 1726 men from 1984 to 2000. Depression was assessed at baseline by HPL depression score. Pension records were obtained from the national pension registers. Cox's regression analysis was used to estimate the associations of depression with the risk of all disability pensions combined, separately for different causes of disability, and non-illness based pension. RESULTS: During the follow up, 839 men (48.6%) received a disability pension. A total of 142 men (16.9% of all disability pensions) retired because of mental disorder and of these, 75 (52.8%) because of depression. After adjustment for the potential confounders, men in the highest third of depression score had an increased risk of non-illness based pension (RR 1.86 95% CI 1.37 to 2.51) and disability pension attributable to mental disorders (RR 2.74, 95% CI 1.68 to 4.46), chronic somatic diseases (RR 1.68, 95% CI 1.05 to 2.71), cardiovascular diseases (RR 1.61, 95% CI 1.12 to 2.32). The mean age of retirement for men with a high and low depression score was 57.6 years (SD 3.87) and 59.1 years (SD 3.65) (p<0.001) respectively. CONCLUSIONS: A high depression score predicted disability attributable to any cause, especially mental disorders, and non-illness based pensions. Depressed people retired on average 1.5 years younger than those without depression. Further studies are needed to elucidate the pathways of how mental depression leads people to seek retirement pension.
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David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Kari Punnonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  The metabolic syndrome and smoking in relation to hypogonadism in middle-aged men: a prospective cohort study.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 90: 2. 712-719 Feb  
Abstract: In men, hypoandrogenism is associated with features of the metabolic syndrome. It is not known whether men with the metabolic syndrome are at a higher risk of developing hypogonadism. We therefore assessed whether the metabolic syndrome predicts development of hypogonadism 11 yr later in 651 middle-aged Finnish men participating in a population-based cohort study. Men with the metabolic syndrome at baseline as defined by the World Health Organization (n = 114, 20%) had a 2.6-fold increased risk of developing hypogonadism as defined by total testosterone levels less than 11 nmol/liter at the 11-yr follow-up independent of age, smoking, and other potential confounders. Further adjustment for body mass index (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.1-3.8) or baseline total testosterone levels (OR, 1.9; 95% CI, 1.0-3.4) attenuated the association. The association of the metabolic syndrome with hypogonadism as defined by calculated free testosterone levels less than 225 pmol/liter was similar, but weaker. The adjusted decrease in testosterone concentrations during the 11-yr follow-up was also greater in men with than without the metabolic syndrome. Smokers had a nonsignificantly lower risk of developing hypogonadism during follow-up, whereas a decrease in smoking increased the risk of hypogonadism. The metabolic syndrome predisposes to development of hypogonadism in middle-aged men. Prevention of abdominal obesity and the accompanying metabolic syndrome in middle age may decrease the risk of hypogonadism in men, especially in those who quit smoking.
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David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Kari Punnonen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  C-reactive protein in the prediction of cardiovascular and overall mortality in middle-aged men: a population-based cohort study.   Eur Heart J 26: 17. 1783-1789 Sep  
Abstract: AIMS: Cut-offs for C-reactive protein concentrations have been recommended for risk stratification, but little is known about how these cut-offs predict cardiovascular risk in population-based cohorts. We therefore assessed the association of C-reactive protein levels with cardiovascular mortality in a population-based cohort of 2321 middle-aged men stratified by the presence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) at baseline. METHODS AND RESULTS: C-reactive protein concentrations were categorized according to current recommendations (1 and 3 mg/L). During the 15 year follow-up, 77 men without CVD and 121 men with CVD at baseline died of CVD. In men without CVD at baseline (n=1476), age-adjusted cardiovascular mortality was 4.1-fold higher (95% CI 2.1-8.2) for C-reactive protein levels between 3.0 and 9.9 mg/L at baseline than for C-reactive protein levels <1.0 mg/L. In men with CVD at baseline (n=845), the corresponding age-adjusted cardiovascular mortality was 3.3-fold higher (95% CI 2.0-5.3). Adjustment for conventional CVD risk factors attenuated the risk somewhat. Further adjustment for dietary and lifestyle factors and factors related to insulin resistance did not affect the association. Classification of C-reactive protein by tertiles gave qualitatively similar results, but identified twice as many men at high risk. C-reactive protein levels also predicted overall mortality. CONCLUSION: Currently, recommended cut-offs for C-reactive protein levels identify men at risk for cardiovascular and overall death independently of conventional and other risk factors in a population-based sample of middle-aged men with and without CVD at baseline. Lower cut-offs may better identify men at high risk for cardiovascular death, but improvement of current recommendations will require standardization of C-reactive protein assays.
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Jyrki K Virtanen, Sari Voutilainen, Pertti Happonen, Georg Alfthan, Jari Kaikkonen, Jaakko Mursu, Tiina H Rissanen, George A Kaplan, Maarit J Korhonen, Juhani Sivenius, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Serum homocysteine, folate and risk of stroke: Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study.   Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil 12: 4. 369-375 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Homocysteine and folate have been suggested to have opposite effects on the risk of stroke, although the results are controversial. DESIGN AND METHODS: The purpose of this study was to assess the effects of serum total homocysteine (tHcy) and serum folate levels on the risk of stroke in a prospective cohort study. The subjects were 1015 men aged 46-64 years and free of prior stroke, examined in 1991-1993 in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. RESULTS: At baseline the mean serum tHcy concentration was 10.9 micromol/l (SD 3.4). During an average follow-up time of 9.6 years, 49 men experienced a stroke, of which 34 were ischaemic. In Cox proportional hazards models, men in the highest tHcy third had a risk factor-adjusted hazard rate ratio (RR) of 2.77 [95% confidence interval (CI): 1.23-6.24] for any stroke and 2.61 (95% CI: 1.02-6.71) for ischaemic stroke, compared with men in the lowest third. The mean baseline serum folate concentration was 10.4 nmol/l (SD 4.1). Men in the highest third of serum folate (>11.2 nmol/l) had an adjusted RR for any stroke of 0.35 (95% CI: 0.14-0.87) and for ischaemic stroke of 0.40 (95% CI: 0.15-1.09), compared with men in the lowest third. CONCLUSION: Elevated serum tHcy is associated with increased risk of all strokes and ischaemic strokes in middle-aged eastern Finnish men free of prior stroke. On the other hand, high serum folate concentration may protect against stroke.
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Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Jaakko Eränen, Matti Huttunen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Left atrium size and the risk of cardiovascular death in middle-aged men.   Arch Intern Med 165: 15. 1788-1793 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The echocardiographic identification of subclinical risk markers may enhance risk stratification for the development of cardiovascular outcomes in the general population. Although echocardiography is widely used in the evaluation of cardiac structures and function, the prognostic value of echocardiographic assessment of left atrium (LA) size for risk stratification of cardiovascular death is unknown. METHODS: Left ventricular (LV) mass and LA size were measured by using M-mode echocardiography in a representative population-based sample of 830 men (age, 42-61 years) from eastern Finland. There were 54 deaths due to cardiovascular disease during an average follow-up of 13 years. RESULTS: The strongest risk factors for cardiovascular death were smoking, family history of coronary heart disease, low exercise capacity, elevated blood pressure, exercise-induced myocardial ischemia, and large LA diameter. Men in the highest tertile of LA diameter (>43 mm) had a 2.3-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.1-5.0) risk of cardiovascular death compared with men in the lowest tertile of LA diameter (<39 mm), after adjusting for other risk factors and the use of antihypertensive medications. The excess risk for cardiovascular mortality appeared to reside largely in the highest tertile of LA size. After additional adjustment for LV mass, the relation between LA size and mortality did not remain statistically significant (relative risk, 1.5; 95% confidence interval, 0.8-4.1; P = .15) in this group. CONCLUSIONS: This prospective population-based study shows that echocardiographically defined LA diameter was directly related to the risk of cardiovascular death. The association of LA enlargement to cardiovascular death appears to be partially related to LV hypertrophy.
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Pekka Uimari, Outi Kontkanen, Peter M Visscher, Mia Pirskanen, Ricardo Fuentes, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Genome-wide linkage disequilibrium from 100,000 SNPs in the East Finland founder population.   Twin Res Hum Genet 8: 3. 185-197 Jun  
Abstract: Information about linkage disequilibrium (LD) is important in understanding the genome structure and has its applications in association studies. Here we present the first genome-wide LD study based on a founder population (East Finland). The LD data consist of 118 unrelated individuals and around 480,000 SNP pairs genotyped with the Affymetrix 100K genotyping assay. Using the minor allele frequency (MAF) limit of .05, the squared correlation coefficient between two loci (r(2)) was .48, .37, .28, and .20 for distances of 5, 10, 20, and 40 kb respectively. MAF had a significant effect on the mean r(2) so that the extent of useful LD (r(2) > .3) varied from 17 kb to 80 kb depending on the limit set for the MAF. For D' the effect of MAF was smaller but reflected the possible age of the mutation: SNPs with high MAF had lower D' than those with low MAF. The X chromosome showed higher D' values than autosomes and the extent of useful LD (r(2) > .3) was twice as long on the X chromosome than on the autosomes. Based on the results, LD varies across the genome and is correlated to local recombination rate between and within chromosomes. However, the recombination rate does not explain all the variation found in LD. We also report a number of long chromosomal regions where exceptionally high or low LD were detected.
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John Danesh, Sarah Lewington, Simon G Thompson, Gordon D O Lowe, Rory Collins, J B Kostis, A C Wilson, A R Folsom, K Wu, M Benderly, U Goldbourt, J Willeit, S Kiechl, J W G Yarnell, P M Sweetnam, P C Elwood, M Cushman, B M Psaty, R P Tracy, A Tybjaerg-Hansen, F Haverkate, M P M de Maat, F G R Fowkes, A J Lee, F B Smith, V Salomaa, K Harald, R Rasi, E Vahtera, P Jousilahti, J Pekkanen, R D'Agostino, W B Kannel, P W F Wilson, G Tofler, C L Arocha-Piñango, A Rodriguez-Larralde, E Nagy, M Mijares, R Espinosa, E Rodriquez-Roa, E Ryder, M P Diez-Ewald, G Campos, V Fernandez, E Torres, R Marchioli, F Valagussa, A Rosengren, L Wilhelmsen, G Lappas, H Eriksson, P Cremer, D Nagel, J D Curb, B Rodriguez, K Yano, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, T - P Tuomainen, B Hedblad, P Lind, H Loewel, W Koenig, T W Meade, J A Cooper, B De Stavola, C Knottenbelt, G J Miller, K A Bauer, R D Rosenberg, S Sato, A Kitamura, Y Naito, T Palosuo, P Ducimetiere, P Amouyel, D Arveiler, A E Evans, J Ferrieres, I Juhan-Vague, A Bingham, H Schulte, G Assmann, B Cantin, B Lamarche, J - P Després, G R Dagenais, H Tunstall-Pedoe, M Woodward, Y Ben-Shlomo, G Davey Smith, V Palmieri, J L Yeh, A Rudnicka, P Ridker, F Rodeghiero, A Tosetto, J Shepherd, I Ford, M Robertson, E Brunner, M Shipley, E J M Feskens, D Kromhout, A Dickinson, B Ireland, K Juzwishin, S Kaptoge, S Lewington, A Memon, N Sarwar, M Walker, J Wheeler, I White, A Wood (2005)  Plasma fibrinogen level and the risk of major cardiovascular diseases and nonvascular mortality: an individual participant meta-analysis.   JAMA 294: 14. 1799-1809 Oct  
Abstract: CONTEXT: Plasma fibrinogen levels may be associated with the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD) and stroke. OBJECTIVE: To assess the relationships of fibrinogen levels with risk of major vascular and with risk of nonvascular outcomes based on individual participant data. DATA SOURCES: Relevant studies were identified by computer-assisted searches, hand searches of reference lists, and personal communication with relevant investigators. STUDY SELECTION: All identified prospective studies were included with information available on baseline fibrinogen levels and details of subsequent major vascular morbidity and/or cause-specific mortality during at least 1 year of follow-up. Studies were excluded if they recruited participants on the basis of having had a previous history of cardiovascular disease; participants with known preexisting CHD or stroke were excluded. DATA EXTRACTION: Individual records were provided on each of 154,211 participants in 31 prospective studies. During 1.38 million person-years of follow-up, there were 6944 first nonfatal myocardial infarctions or stroke events and 13,210 deaths. Cause-specific mortality was generally available. Analyses involved proportional hazards modeling with adjustment for confounding by known cardiovascular risk factors and for regression dilution bias. DATA SYNTHESIS: Within each age group considered (40-59, 60-69, and > or =70 years), there was an approximately log-linear association with usual fibrinogen level for the risk of any CHD, any stroke, other vascular (eg, non-CHD, nonstroke) mortality, and nonvascular mortality. There was no evidence of a threshold within the range of usual fibrinogen level studied at any age. The age- and sex- adjusted hazard ratio per 1-g/L increase in usual fibrinogen level for CHD was 2.42 (95% confidence interval [CI], 2.24-2.60); stroke, 2.06 (95% CI, 1.83-2.33); other vascular mortality, 2.76 (95% CI, 2.28-3.35); and nonvascular mortality, 2.03 (95% CI, 1.90-2.18). The hazard ratios for CHD and stroke were reduced to about 1.8 after further adjustment for measured values of several established vascular risk factors. In a subset of 7011 participants with available C-reactive protein values, the findings for CHD were essentially unchanged following additional adjustment for C-reactive protein. The associations of fibrinogen level with CHD or stroke did not differ substantially according to sex, smoking, blood pressure, blood lipid levels, or several features of study design. CONCLUSIONS: In this large individual participant meta-analysis, moderately strong associations were found between usual plasma fibrinogen level and the risks of CHD, stroke, other vascular mortality, and nonvascular mortality in a wide range of circumstances in healthy middle-aged adults. Assessment of any causal relevance of elevated fibrinogen levels to disease requires additional research.
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J Westerbacka, E Leinonen, J T Salonen, R Salonen, A Hiukka, H Yki-Järvinen, M - R Taskinen (2005)  Increased augmentation of central blood pressure is associated with increases in carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetic patients.   Diabetologia 48: 8. 1654-1662 Aug  
Abstract: AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Type 2 diabetes is associated with a two- to seven-fold increase in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study was to determine the relationships between intima-media thickness (IMT), an established marker of atherosclerosis, large artery function and other determinants of cardiovascular risk in type 2 diabetic patients. METHODS: We studied 228 type 2 diabetic patients (75 women, aged 62+/-2 years [mean+/-SEM]). Carotid IMT was bilaterally measured using ultrasound technology. Applanation tonometry and pulse wave analysis were used to measure aortic systolic and diastolic blood pressures, central pressure augmentation (AG) and the augmentation index (AIx), a measure of systemic arterial stiffness. Conventional cardiovascular risk factors (lipids, HbA(1)c, smoking and diabetes duration) were also assessed. RESULTS: Women had higher AG and AIx (p<0.0001), despite comparable systolic BP and heart rate in women and men. In women, AG (r=0.39, p<0.001), age (r=0.32, p<0.01), brachial systolic BP (r=0.34, p<0.01) and aortic systolic BP (r=0.34, p<0.01) correlated with IMT. In men, age (r=0.41, p<0.001), diabetes duration (r=0.25, p<0.01), AG (r=0.22, p<0.01), aortic systolic BP (r=0.21, p<0.01), brachial systolic BP (r=0.21, p<0.01) and body weight (r=0.16, p<0.05) correlated with IMT. In multiple linear regression analyses, AG and aortic systolic BP, but not brachial systolic BP, were age-independent determinants of IMT in men and women. In all patients, increased AG (adjusted for sex, age and heart rate) correlated with longer duration of diabetes, urinary albumin excretion and IMT. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Measures of central systolic pressure correlate with carotid IMT, independently of age and other risk markers.
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Peter R Hillestrøm, Kristiina Nyssönen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Eero Pukkala, Jukka T Salonen, Henrik E Poulsen (2005)  Urinary excretion of epsilondA is not predictive of cancer development: a prospective nested case-control study.   Free Radic Res 39: 1. 51-53 Jan  
Abstract: Human biomonitoring of the lipid peroxidation DNA modification 1,N6-ethenodeoxyadenosine (epsilondA) excreted into urine is thought to be a potential marker for oxidative stress-related DNA damage and human cancer. We have tested this hypothesis in a prospective, nested case-control study. During the years 1984-1989, 24-h urines were collected from 1956 men in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease (KIHD) Risk Factor Study. epsilondA concentrations were measured by LC-MS/MS in 24-h urine samples from 47 men with cancer diagnosed at follow up until 2001 and from 31 cancer free smoking-matched control subjects. Odds ratio for having higher than control median epsilon dA excretion rate and cancer, estimated by binary logistic regression, was 0.73 (95% CI 0.29-1.80, p = 0.49). In this study, the urinary excretion of epsilondA provides no additional prediction of cancer development in males after controlling for smoking.
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Ricardo A Pollitt, Mark Daniel, Jay S Kaufman, John W Lynch, Jukka T Salonen, George A Kaplan (2005)  Mediation and modification of the association between hopelessness, hostility, and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   J Behav Med 28: 1. 53-64 Feb  
Abstract: Hopelessness and hostility are linked to progression of carotid atherosclerosis (PCA). The purpose of this study was to replicate such relations and to evaluate the role of biological pathways involving hyperactivation of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical (HPA) axis. PCA was evaluated by 4-year change in three ultrasound measures of intima-media thickness (IMT) in 1027 men aged 42-60 years at baseline. Effect modification and mediation of relationships between psychosocial factors and PCA were examined for the measures systolic blood pressure (SBP), fibrinogen, and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), levels of which are indicative of activity along these pathways. Hopelessness and hostility were associated with PCA. Fibrinogen mediated to a moderate extent the association between hopelessness and PCA. SBP significantly modified the relation between hostility and PCA in participants of moderate hostility. The above biological pathways are implicated in the mechanisms connecting hopelessness, hostility, and PCA.
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Jaakko Mursu, Sari Voutilainen, Tarja Nurmi, Meri Helleranta, Tiina H Rissanen, Anna Nurmi, Jari Kaikkonen, Elina Porkkala-Sarataho, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jyrki K Virtanen, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen (2005)  Polyphenol-rich phloem enhances the resistance of total serum lipids to oxidation in men.   J Agric Food Chem 53: 8. 3017-3022 Apr  
Abstract: In humans, polyphenol supplementation studies have resulted in inconsistent findings in lipid peroxidation. Our aim was to investigate the effects of a 4-week consumption of polyphenol-rich phloem on serum lipids and lipid peroxidation in the hydrophilic fraction of serum and on isolated lipoproteins. We conducted a randomized double-blind supplementation study consisting of 75 nonsmoking hypercholesterolemic men. Participants consumed 70 g daily of either rye bread (placebo) or phloem-fortified rye bread containing 31 mg (low polyphenol, LP) or 62 mg (high polyphenol, HP) of catechins. The ex vivo susceptibility of total serum lipids and VLDL and LDL to oxidation after copper induction was measured as a lag time to the maximal oxidation rate at the baseline and after the supplementation. In the HP group, an increase in the oxidation resistance of total serum lipids was observed (11.4%), while no effect was seen in the LP group (-0.8%) or in the placebo group (-1.0%) (p = 0.007). No differences were observed in the oxidation resistance of VLDL and LDL between the study groups. The phloem also increased in vitro oxidation resistance of serum lipids and radical scavenging activity (DPPH.) in a dose-dependent manner. Our results suggest that polyphenols may inhibit lipid peroxidation in the hydrophilic fraction of serum.
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J Kaikkonen, T P Tuomainen, K Nyyssönen, J D Morrow, J T Salonen (2004)  C18 hydroxy fatty acids as markers of lipid peroxidation ex vivo and in vivo.   Scand J Clin Lab Invest 64: 5. 457-468  
Abstract: Different C18 monohydroxy fatty acids (OHFAs) were evaluated for their usefulness as markers of plasma lipid peroxidation (unsaturated fatty acid oxidation) ex vivo and in vivo. First, plasma samples (n = 5) were exposed for 3 h to different radical fluxes ex vivo. The formation of OHFAs was assessed by using varying concentrations of Cu2+ ions and AAPH (2,2'-azobis(2-amidinopropane) hydrochloride) as radical flux initiators. Secondly, a cross-sectional study was carried out in 47 middle-aged men. In this study, plasma concentrations of different in vivo OHFAs were compared with other indices of lipid peroxidation. Under mild oxidation conditions (heparin plasma containing 4.2 or 8.3 mM AAPH), concentrations of all the measured OHFAs (8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 15 and 16-OH acids) increased in an identical manner, but under highly oxidative conditions (heparin plasma containing 83 mM AAPH or 4.2 to 8.3 mM CuSO4) mainly 9 and 13-OHFAs were formed. In the cross-sectional study, plasma 11 and 13-OHFA levels were associated statistically significantly with plasma free F2alpha-isoprostanes, recognized index of in vivo lipid peroxidation (r = 0.305, p = 0.037 and r = 0.308, p = 0.035, respectively). In addition, 16-OHFA levels correlated with the ratio of electronegatively charged LDL to total LDL (r = 0.335, p = 0.021). With respect to the other OHFAs, 15-OHFA had no correlation with either other OHFAs or the reference substances used. In addition, occasionally there were contamination problems in the assessment of 12-OHFA. It is concluded that all of the measured C18 OHFAs can be used as indicators of plasma lipid peroxidation under mild oxidation conditions, though the 12 and 15-OHFAs may need to be used with some caution. Under high oxidation conditions, 9-and 13-OHFAs seem to be the most useful indices because of their high formation capacity.
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E S Leinonen, A Hiukka, E Hurt-Camejo, O Wiklund, S S Sarna, L Mattson Hultén, J Westerbacka, R M Salonen, J T Salonen, M - R Taskinen (2004)  Low-grade inflammation, endothelial activation and carotid intima-media thickness in type 2 diabetes.   J Intern Med 256: 2. 119-127 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The objective of this study was to assess the relationship between inflammation, endothelial activation and incipient atherosclerosis in type 2 diabetes. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. Setting and subjects. We studied 239 type 2 diabetic patients [71 with clinical cardiovascular disease (CVD)] and 78 healthy control subjects, aged 50-75 in a single research centre. METHODS: Carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) was determined by ultrasound. Circulating intracellular adhesion molecule-1, vascular cell adhesion molecule-1, E-selectin, ultra-sensitive C-reactive protein, human serum amyloid A, interleukin-6, monocyte colony-stimulating factor, secretory nonpancreatic phospholipase A(2) type IIA, glucose, HbA1c, and lipid/lipoprotein variables were measured. RESULTS: Carotid IMT was significantly thicker in diabetic patients than healthy controls across the whole age range. IMT was also thicker in diabetic patients with, than without, CVD, but this difference disappeared after controlling for confounding factors. Concentrations of the inflammatory and endothelial markers except IL-6 were significantly higher in the diabetic patients than in healthy controls, but comparable in diabetic patients with and without CVD. The main determinants of IMT in the diabetic patients were blood pressure, age and diabetes duration. CONCLUSIONS: Low-grade inflammation and endothelial activation are increased in diabetic patients but do not associate with IMT or clinical CVD. The inflammatory reaction seems to be rather a feature of the metabolic syndrome than a direct determinant of atherosclerosis.
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Leo K Niskanen, David E Laaksonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Georg Alfthan, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Timo A Lakka, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Uric acid level as a risk factor for cardiovascular and all-cause mortality in middle-aged men: a prospective cohort study.   Arch Intern Med 164: 14. 1546-1551 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Despite abundant epidemiologic evidence, the role of elevated serum uric acid level as a cardiovascular risk factor is controversial. We assessed the predictive value of serum uric acid levels for cardiovascular and overall mortality. METHODS: A population-based prospective cohort study was performed of 1423 middle-aged Finnish men initially without cardiovascular disease, cancer, or diabetes. The main outcome measure was death from cardiovascular disease and any cause. RESULTS: The mean follow-up was 11.9 years. There were 157 deaths during follow-up, of which 55 were cardiovascular. In age-adjusted analyses, serum uric acid levels in the upper third were associated with a greater than 2.5-fold higher risk of death from cardiovascular disease than levels in the lower third. Taking into account cardiovascular risk factors and variables commonly associated with gout increased the relative risk to 3.73. Further adjustment for factors related to the metabolic syndrome strengthened the risk to 4.77. Excluding the 53 men using diuretics did not alter the results. In age-adjusted analyses, men with serum uric acid levels in the upper third were 1.7-fold more likely to die of any cause than men with levels in the lower third. Adjustment for further risk factors strengthened the association somewhat. CONCLUSIONS: Serum uric acid levels are a strong predictor of cardiovascular disease mortality in healthy middle-aged men, independent of variables commonly associated with gout or the metabolic syndrome. Serum uric acid measurement is an easily available and inexpensive risk marker, but whether its relationship to cardiovascular events is circumstantial or causal remains to be answered.
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David E Laaksonen, Jari A Laukkanen, Leo Niskanen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Tiina H Rissanen, Sari Voutilainen, Eero Pukkala, Anna Hakkarainen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Serum linoleic and total polyunsaturated fatty acids in relation to prostate and other cancers: a population-based cohort study.   Int J Cancer 111: 3. 444-450 Sep  
Abstract: Dietary and serum fatty acid composition has been implicated in the pathogenesis of prostate and other cancers, but findings have been conflicting. Cohort studies reporting serum fatty acid composition are lacking. We assessed the association of fatty acid composition determined from dietary records and serum with incident cancer of the prostate and any site in a population-based cohort of 2,002 middle-aged Finnish men who were free of cancer at baseline and during the first 4 years of follow-up. During 12.6 years of follow-up, 46 men developed prostate cancer and 151 any cancer. Men with proportions of serum nonesterified [risk ratio (RR) 0.28; 95% confidence intervals (CI) 0.12-0.66] and esterified linoleic acid (RR 0.37; 95% CI = 0.16-0.86) and total polyunsaturated fatty acids (RR 0.30; 95% CI = 0.12-0.71) in the upper third were less than 1/3 as likely to develop prostate cancer during follow-up. Adjustment for possible confounders like socioeconomic status, physical activity, obesity and insulin concentrations did not attenuate the association. Similar but weaker associations with any cancer were found. Dietary linoleic acid intake also tended to be inversely associated with incident prostate cancer (age-adjusted RR for the upper vs. lower third 0.55; 95% CI = 0.26-1.14, p for the trend 0.097). Substitution of linoleic acid for saturated fat in middle-aged men consuming a high saturated-fat diet may decrease the risk of prostate and other cancers, although it is possible that some of the effect may be mediated by nutrients closely associated with vegetable fats.
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Sari Voutilainen, Jyrki K Virtanen, Tiina H Rissanen, Georg Alfthan, Jari Laukkanen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jaakko Mursu, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Serum folate and homocysteine and the incidence of acute coronary events: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Clin Nutr 80: 2. 317-323 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Several, but not all, prospective studies have shown that low folate intakes, low circulating folate concentrations, or high plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentrations are associated with an increased risk of coronary artery disease (CAD). OBJECTIVE: We examined the relations of both serum folate and serum tHcy concentrations with acute coronary events in middle-aged men from eastern Finland who had no CAD at baseline. DESIGN: In a population-based prospective cohort study, 1027 men aged 46-64 y were examined in 1991-1993 as part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. During an average follow-up of 7.7 y (7900 person-years of follow-up), 114 acute coronary events were observed in 61 men who had no previous history of CAD (n = 810). RESULTS: In a Cox model, compared with men whose serum folate concentrations were in the lowest tertile, those whose concentrations were in the highest tertile had a risk factor-adjusted relative risk of acute coronary events of 0.35 (95% CI: 0.17, 0.73; P = 0.005). Serum tHcy concentrations were not significantly associated with the risk of acute coronary events (for the highest tertile compared with the lowest, adjusted relative risk = 1.03; 95% CI: 0.57, 1.87; P = 0.932). CONCLUSIONS: The results of this prospective cohort study do not support the hypothesis that a high circulating tHcy concentration is a risk factor for acute coronary events in a male population free of prior heart disease. However, they do suggest that moderate-to-high serum folate concentrations are associated with a greatly reduced incidence of acute coronary events.
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Katherine A Stamatakis, John Lynch, Susan A Everson, Trivellore Raghunathan, Jukka T Salonen, George A Kaplan (2004)  Self-esteem and mortality: prospective evidence from a population-based study.   Ann Epidemiol 14: 1. 58-65 Jan  
Abstract: PURPOSE: Self-esteem is considered to be importantly associated with both psychosocial states such as depression as well as physical health. There are no population-based studies that examine the association between self-esteem and mortality. The objective of this study was to assess whether low self-esteem was prospectively associated with increased risk of death in a population-based sample of Finnish men. METHODS: A sample of 2682 male residents of Kuopio, Finland were interviewed and followed prospectively as part of the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). Characteristics of the KIHD sample at baseline included self-esteem, measured by the Rosenberg ten-item scale, socioeconomic factors, behavioral risk factors, other psychosocial characteristics, and prevalent diseases. Mortality was ascertained through linkage to the Finnish national death registry. We assessed the relationship between self-esteem and all-cause mortality using Cox proportional hazards models. RESULTS: Low self-esteem was associated with a two-fold [hazard ratio (HR)=2.0, 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.3-3.2] increase in age-adjusted mortality. This relationship was partially explained by behavioral and socioeconomic factors, and prevalent diseases, and fully explained by other psychosocial characteristics (hopelessness, depression, cynical hostility, and sullenness). When adjusted for hopelessness alone there was no increased risk associated with low self-esteem (HR=1.3, 95% CI=0.8-2.2). CONCLUSIONS: This study found no association between self-esteem and all-cause mortality after adjustment for other psychosocial characteristics, primarily hopelessness. Our understanding of the observed relationships between some psychosocial factors and mortality may be improved by simultaneous measurement of multiple psychosocial domains, thus diminishing the potential for residual confounding.
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D E Laaksonen, L Niskanen, K Nyyssönen, K Punnonen, T - P Tuomainen, V - P Valkonen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (2004)  C-reactive protein and the development of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in middle-aged men.   Diabetologia 47: 8. 1403-1410 Aug  
Abstract: AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Low-grade inflammation has been implicated in the development of Type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, but its role in the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome is unclear. We investigated the association between C-reactive protein (CRP) levels and the development of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in men. METHODS: Serum CRP concentrations and factors related to insulin resistance were determined in middle-aged Finnish men who participated in a population-based cohort study and were free of diabetes at baseline. RESULTS: At the 11-year follow-up, 143 of 680 men had developed the metabolic syndrome as defined by the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) and 103 of 598 men had developed the metabolic syndrome as defined by the World Health Organization (WHO). Our analyses excluded men with the metabolic syndrome by the respective definition at baseline. In all, 78 of 762 men developed diabetes over the same period. Men with CRP concentrations > or =3 mg/l had a several-fold higher age-adjusted risk of developing the metabolic syndrome (NCEP definition: odds ratio [OR]=3.2, 95% CI 1.9-5.5; WHO definition: OR=3.4, 95% CI 2.0-6.1) or diabetes (OR=4.1, 95% CI 2.1-8.0) than men whose CRP levels were <1.0 mg/l. Even after further adjustment for potentially confounding lifestyle factors and factors related to insulin resistance, the risk of diabetes (OR=2.3, 95% CI 1.0-5.1) was still increased in men with CRP concentrations > or =3 mg/l, but the association with the metabolic syndrome was no longer significant. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Low-grade inflammation may increase the risk of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in middle-aged men, but some of the risk is mediated through obesity and factors related to insulin resistance.
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Fareeza Faisel, Eeva-Liisa Romppanen, Mikko Hiltunen, Seppo Helisalmi, Jaana Laasanen, Kari Punnonen, Jukka T Salonen, Seppo Heinonen (2004)  Susceptibility to pre-eclampsia in Finnish women is associated with R485K polymorphism in the factor V gene, not with Leiden mutation.   Eur J Hum Genet 12: 3. 187-191 Mar  
Abstract: This study determines whether genetic variability in the gene-encoding factor V contributes to differences in pre-eclampsia susceptibility. Allele and genotype frequencies of three single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the factor V gene leading to nonsynonymous changes (M385T in exon 8, and R485K and R506Q (Leiden mutation) in exon 10) were studied in 133 Caucasian women with pre-eclampsia and 112 healthy controls. Single-point analysis was expanded to haplotype analysis, and haplotype frequencies were estimated using an expectation-maximization algorithm. Comparison of single-point allele and genotype distributions of SNPs in exons 8 and 10 of the factor V gene revealed statistically significant differences in R485K allele (P=0.003) and genotype (P=0.03) frequencies between the patients and the control subjects. The A allele of SNP R485K was over-represented among the patients (12%) vs the control subjects (4%), at an odds ratio (OR) of 2.8 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2-6.2) for combined A genotypes (GA+AA vs GG). Allele and genotype differences between the patients and control subjects as regards M385T and Leiden mutation were not significant. In haplotype estimation analysis, there was a significantly elevated frequency of haplotype T-A-G encoding the M385-K485-R506 variant in the pre-eclamptic group vs the control group (P=0.01), at an OR of 2.6 (95% CI 1.2-5.5). We conclude that the T-A-G haplotype was more frequent among the patient group than in the control group, and genetic variations in the factor V gene other than the Leiden mutation may play a role in disease susceptibility.
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David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Kari Punnonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin predict the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in middle-aged men.   Diabetes Care 27: 5. 1036-1041 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: In men, hypoandrogenism is associated with features of the metabolic syndrome, but the role of sex hormones in the pathogenesis of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes is not well understood. We assessed the association of low levels of testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) with the development of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in men. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Concentrations of SHBG and total and calculated free testosterone and factors related to insulin resistance were determined at baseline in 702 middle-aged Finnish men participating in a population-based cohort study. These men had neither diabetes nor the metabolic syndrome. RESULTS: After 11 years of follow-up, 147 men had developed the metabolic syndrome (National Cholesterol Education Program criteria) and 57 men diabetes. Men with total testosterone, calculated free testosterone, and SHBG levels in the lower fourth had a severalfold increased risk of developing the metabolic syndrome (odds ratio [OR] 2.3, 95% CI 1.5-3.4; 1.7, 1.2-2.5; and 2.8, 1.9-4.1, respectively) and diabetes (2.3, 1.3-4.1; 1.7, 0.9-3.0; and 4.3, 2.4-7.7, respectively) after adjustment for age. Adjustment for potential confounders such as cardiovascular disease, smoking, alcohol intake, and socioeconomic status did not alter the associations. Factors related to insulin resistance attenuated the associations, but they remained significant, except for free testosterone. CONCLUSIONS: Low total testosterone and SHBG levels independently predict development of the metabolic syndrome and diabetes in middle-aged men. Thus, hypoandrogenism is an early marker for disturbances in insulin and glucose metabolism that may progress to the metabolic syndrome or frank diabetes and may contribute to their pathogenesis.
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Ming-Lin Liu, Kati Ylitalo, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen, Marja-Riitta Taskinen (2004)  Circulating oxidized low-density lipoprotein and its association with carotid intima-media thickness in asymptomatic members of familial combined hyperlipidemia families.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 24: 8. 1492-1497 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Oxidized low-density lipoprotein (Ox-LDL)is implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Circulating oxidation-specific epitopes on plasma Ox-LDL has been linked with coronary artery disease, but its determinants and its association with early development of atherosclerosis in familial combined hyperlipidemia (FCHL) has not been very well studied. This study aimed to investigate the determinants of the circulating Ox-LDL and the association between Ox-LDL and carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) in asymptomatic members of FCHL families. METHODS AND RESULTS: Ox-LDL, susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro, plasma 8-isoprostane and antioxidants, lipids and lipoproteins, LDL particle size, and carotid IMT were measured in 150 asymptomatic FCHL family members. Affected FCHL family members had reduced LDL particle size and lag time for LDL oxidation, increased plasma levels of Ox-LDL, increased plasma urate and alpha-tocopherol, and a trend for the increase of 8-isoprostane as compared with nonaffected FCHL. Ox-LDL was independently associated with serum LDL cholesterol, apoB, and 8-isoprostane in multivariate analysis but only univariately correlated with LDL particle size and lag time for LDL oxidation. In addition, Ox-LDL was significantly associated with carotid mean IMT independently of other clinical and biochemical variables in a multivariate model. CONCLUSIONS: Serum LDL cholesterol, apoB levels, and 8-isoprostane were the most important determinants of Ox-LDL. Ox-LDL is independently associated with carotid IMT in asymptomatic FCHL family members and can be used as a marker of early atherosclerosis in FCHL.
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Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Riitta Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  The predictive value of cardiorespiratory fitness for cardiovascular events in men with various risk profiles: a prospective population-based cohort study.   Eur Heart J 25: 16. 1428-1437 Aug  
Abstract: AIMS: Few data exist to show if the prognostic value of peak exercise oxygen consumption (VO2peak) for fatal and non-fatal coronary events is different among men with low and high pre-test probability for cardiovascular disease (CVD). Our objective was to determine whether VO2peak could predict fatal and non-fatal cardiac events in 2361 men aged 42-60 years with and without conventional risk predictors of CVD or with documented CVD during a 13-year follow-up. METHODS AND RESULTS: Maximal oxygen consumption (ml/kg/min) was measured directly by using respiratory gas exchange in a cycle ergometer exercise test. Of 204 CVD deaths, 153 were due to coronary disease and 51 were due to other CVDs. A total of 323 non-fatal coronary events occurred during the follow-up. One metabolic equivalent (MET) increment in VO2peak was related to a decreased risk of coronary death in both healthy (RR=0.82, 95% CI 0.66-0.99) and unhealthy (RR=0.72, 95% CI 0.63-0.82) men. VO2peak was predictive of non-fatal and fatal cardiac events among men with or without known risk factors. In subjects with or without common risk factors, one MET increment amounted to an average decrease of 17-29% in non-fatal and 28-51% in fatal cardiac events, after adjustment for age. VO2peak and smoking represented two strongest independent and consistent risk predictors. CONCLUSIONS: VO2peak can be used as a very powerful predictor of future fatal cardiac events beyond that predicted by many conventional risk factors. On the prognostic consideration, unfit men with unfavourable risk profiles or underlying chronic disease are the risk groups that will benefit most from preventive measures.
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Leo Niskanen, David E Laaksonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Kari Punnonen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Ricardo Fuentes, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Inflammation, abdominal obesity, and smoking as predictors of hypertension.   Hypertension 44: 6. 859-865 Dec  
Abstract: Development of hypertension has been linked to chronic low-grade inflammation. However, it is not known whether this connection is mediated by features of the metabolic syndrome or smoking, or their changes, which themselves have been linked to inflammation. We studied the predictive value of highly sensitive C-reactive protein (hs-CRP), smoking, and abdominal obesity to the development of hypertension in an 11-year follow-up of a population-based study cohort comprising 379 middle-aged normotensive men. During the follow-up, 124 men (33%) developed hypertension. Men with hs-CRP > or =3.0 mg/L were 2.8x (95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 6.6) more likely to develop hypertension than with hs-CRP <1.0 mg/L even after adjustment for features of the metabolic syndrome, lifestyle factors, and their changes. Cigarette smoking was also associated with development of hypertension independently of inflammation and other confounders. Waist girth increased more in men who quit smoking than in other men. An increase in waist girth during follow-up strongly predicted incident hypertension. The decrease in smoking was not associated with a lower risk of hypertension in age-adjusted analyses. Hypertension is preceded by low-grade chronic inflammation in middle-aged white men independently of smoking or features of the metabolic syndrome. Furthermore, smoking may be a risk factor for hypertension. Although stopping smoking is beneficial with respect to health outcomes, the subsequent increase in weight and waist girth associated with smoking cessation may offset the decrease in the risk of hypertension that one may otherwise expect.
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Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Riitta Salonen, Timo A Lakka, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Systolic blood pressure during recovery from exercise and the risk of acute myocardial infarction in middle-aged men.   Hypertension 44: 6. 820-825 Dec  
Abstract: We prospectively assessed the association of systolic blood pressure (SBP) after exercise with the risk of an acute myocardial infarction. Limited information exists currently on the role of SBP during recovery period with the risk of acute myocardial infarction. SBP was measured every 2 minutes during and after a progressive cycle ergometer exercise test in a representative sample of 2336 men (aged 42 to 61 years). During an average follow-up period of 13.1 years, 358 acute myocardial infarctions occurred. An incremental rise of 10 mm Hg per minute in SBP at 2 minutes after exercise (relative risk, 1.07-fold; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.03 to 1.12; P=0.001) was associated with the risk of acute myocardial infarction after adjustment for age, alcohol consumption, smoking, serum lipids, diabetes mellitus, body mass index, resting SBP, regular use of antihypertensive medications, physical fitness, heart rate, and ischemic ECG findings during exercise. Men with elevated SBP of >195 mm Hg after exercise had a 1.69-fold (95% CI, 1.24 to 2.30; P=0.001) risk for an acute myocardial infarction compared with those with SBP <170 mm Hg after adjustment for age, other risk factors, and resting SBP. SBP after exercise provides an incremental predictive value for acute myocardial infarction beyond that of resting SBP. This emphasizes the importance of SBP measurements after the exercise test because it provides additional valuable prognostic measure with regard to acute myocardial infarction.
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Kari Seppänen, Pasi Soininen, Jukka T Salonen, Simo Lötjönen, Reino Laatikainen (2004)  Does mercury promote lipid peroxidation? An in vitro study concerning mercury, copper, and iron in peroxidation of low-density lipoprotein.   Biol Trace Elem Res 101: 2. 117-132 Nov  
Abstract: In order to explore the observed association among mercury, atherosclerosis, and coronary heart disease, the effects of mercury, copper, and iron on the peroxidation of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and on the enzymatic activities of glutathione peroxidase and myeloperoxidase were investigated in vitro. On the basis of our nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) experiments, we conclude that mercury does not promote the direct nonenzymatic peroxidation of LDL, like copper and iron. In our enzyme measurements, mercury inhibited slightly myeloperoxidase, although not significantly in presence of LDL. Instead, inorganic mercury, but not methylmercury chloride, inhibited glutathione peroxidase effectively and copper even at 10 micromol/L, below physiological concentrations, doubled the inhibition rate. Copper and iron had no direct effect on glutathione peroxidase, but they both seem to activate production of HOCl by myeloperoxidase. We conclude here that, first, mercury and methylmercury do not promote direct lipid peroxidation, but that, second, a simultaneous exposure to high inorganic mercury, copper, and iron and low selenium concentrations can lead to a condition in which mercury promotes lipid peroxidations. This mechanism provides a plausible molecular-level explanation for the observed association between high body mercury content and atherosclerosis.
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Tommi Tolmunen, Jukka Hintikka, Sari Voutilainen, Anu Ruusunen, Georg Alfthan, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Heimo Viinamäki, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Association between depressive symptoms and serum concentrations of homocysteine in men: a population study.   Am J Clin Nutr 80: 6. 1574-1578 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Results of studies of the association between blood concentrations of homocysteine and depression in general populations and among psychiatric patients are inconsistent. OBJECTIVE: The objective was to study the association between depression and serum concentrations of total homocysteine (tHcy). DESIGN: A cross-sectional study of a sample of 924 men aged 46-64 y was conducted as a part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Those who had a history of psychiatric disorder (6.0%) were excluded. Depressive symptoms were assessed with the 18-item Human Population Laboratory Depression Scale. Those who scored > or =5 at baseline or at the 4-y follow-up were considered to have a tendency toward depression. RESULTS: The participants were ranked according to their blood tHcy concentration and divided into tertiles. Those in the upper tertile for serum tHcy had a more than twofold (odds ratio: 2.30; 95% CI: 1.35, 3.90; P=0.002) higher risk of being depressed than did those in the lowest tertile for serum tHcy. The results remained significant after adjustment for the month of study, history of ischemic heart disease, smoking habits, alcohol consumption, marital status, education, and socioeconomic status in adulthood (odds ratio: 2.23; 95% CI: 1.30, 3.83; P=0.004). CONCLUSION: High serum concentrations of tHcy may be associated with depression in middle-aged men.
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Jari A Laukkanen, David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Eero Pukkala, Anna Hakkarainen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Metabolic syndrome and the risk of prostate cancer in Finnish men: a population-based study.   Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 13: 10. 1646-1650 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Individual components of metabolic syndrome have been linked to an increased risk for prostate cancers. We hypothesized that metabolic syndrome itself could confer an increased risk for incident prostate cancer. METHODS: The participants were a population-based sample of 1,880 men from eastern Finland without history of cancer or diabetes mellitus at baseline. RESULTS: The metabolic syndrome (WHO criteria) was present in 357 (19%) of subjects. During an average follow-up of 13 years, a total of 183 cancers occurred, of which 56 were due to prostate cancer. The metabolic syndrome at baseline was related to a 1.9-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.1-3.5) risk of prostate cancer after adjustment for age, alcohol consumption, physical fitness, and energy, fat, fiber, calcium, vitamin E, and alpha-linolenic acid intake. The association between metabolic syndrome and risk of prostate cancer was stronger among overweight and obese men with a body mass index > or = 27 kg/m2 (adjusted relative risk, 3.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-7.3) than in lighter men (relative risk, 1.8; 95% confidence interval, 0.7-4.7). CONCLUSIONS: Middle-aged men with the metabolic syndrome were more likely to develop prostate cancer in this prospective population-based study. This finding suggests that efforts to curb the epidemic of overweight and sedentary lifestyle and the accompanying metabolic syndrome may decrease the risk for prostate cancer.
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Tommi Tolmunen, Jukka Hintikka, Anu Ruusunen, Sari Voutilainen, Antti Tanskanen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Heimo Viinamäki, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Dietary folate and the risk of depression in Finnish middle-aged men. A prospective follow-up study.   Psychother Psychosom 73: 6. 334-339 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Several cross-sectional studies have focused on the low blood folate levels of depressive patients. Nevertheless, no prospective studies have been published on the association between dietary folate and depression. METHODS: We studied the association between dietary folate and cobalamin and receiving a discharge diagnosis of depression in a prospective follow-up setting. Our cohort was recruited between 1984 and 1989 and followed until the end of 2000, and it consisted of 2,313 men aged between 42 and 60 years from eastern Finland. RESULTS: The mean intake of folate in the whole cohort was 256 microg/day (SD=76). Those below the median of energy-adjusted folate intake had higher risk of getting discharge diagnosis of depression (RR 3.04, 95% CI: 1.58, 5.86) during the follow-up period than those who had a folate intake above the median. This excess risk remained significant after adjustment for current socioeconomic status, the baseline HPL depression score, the energy-adjusted daily intake of fibre and vitamin C, and the total fat intake. CONCLUSIONS: A low dietary intake of folate may be a risk factor for severe depression. This also indicates that nutrition may have a role in the prevention of depression.
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Pertti Happonen, Sari Voutilainen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Coffee drinking is dose-dependently related to the risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men.   J Nutr 134: 9. 2381-2386 Sep  
Abstract: Heavy coffee consumption has been associated with increased coronary heart disease (CHD) risk although many studies have not observed any relation. We studied the effect of coffee consumption, assessed with a 4-d food record, on the incidence of nonfatal acute myocardial infarction or coronary death in a cohort of 1971 men who were 42 to 60 y old and free of symptomatic CHD at baseline in 1984-1989. During a mean follow-up of 14 y, 269 participants experienced an acute coronary event. After adjustment for age, smoking, exercise ischemia, diabetes, income, and serum insulin concentration, the rate ratios (95% CIs) in daily nondrinkers and light (375 mL or less), moderate (reference level), and heavy (814 mL or more) drinkers were 0.84 (0.41-1.72), 1.22 (0.90-1.64), 1.00, and 1.43 (1.06-1.94). To address time dependence of the effect, the analysis was repeated for 75 CHD events that occurred during the first 5 y; the respective rate ratios were 0.42 (0.06-3.10), 2.00 (1.16-3.44), 1.00, and 2.07 (1.17-3.65). Further adjustment for serum HDL and LDL cholesterol concentration, diastolic blood pressure, maximal oxygen uptake, and waist-hip ratio slightly increased the rate ratio for heavy coffee intake. Neither the brewing method (boiling vs. filtering) nor the serum LDL cholesterol concentration had any impact on the risk estimates for coffee intake. In conclusion, heavy coffee consumption increases the short-term risk of acute myocardial infarction or coronary death, independent of the brewing method or currently recognized risk factors for CHD.
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J Richard Jennings, Thomas W Kamarck, Susan A Everson-Rose, George A Kaplan, Stephen B Manuck, J T Salonen (2004)  Exaggerated blood pressure responses during mental stress are prospectively related to enhanced carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged Finnish men.   Circulation 110: 15. 2198-2203 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Hemodynamic reactions to mental stress may contribute to atherosclerosis. We previously observed cross-sectional relationships between blood pressure reactions to a standardized stress battery and carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease (KIHD) study. These are the first prospective results on this relationship. METHODS AND RESULTS: Men from 4 age cohorts (42 to 60 years old at study onset) were challenged with a standardized mental stress battery, and heart rate and blood pressure reactions were assessed. Ultrasound measures of common carotid IMT were collected at this time and 7 years later as noninvasive markers of atherosclerosis. Data were collected from a sample of 756 men at both times. Systolic blood pressure reactions to mental stress at study onset were positively related to mean carotid IMT 7 years later (beta=0.035, P=0.001, by blood pressure quartile, IMT=0.91, 0.93, 0.96, 1.00 mm) and to the progression of IMT (beta=0.020, P=0.006, by blood pressure quartile, DeltaIMT=0.08, 0.09, 0.11, 0.11 mm). Similar significant relations were shown for maximal IMT and plaque height. Diastolic blood pressure responses were less strongly related to carotid IMT than were systolic responses. Heart-rate responses were unrelated. Adjustment for standard risk factors did not substantially reduce the relation between systolic blood pressure reactivity and the progression of mean carotid IMT (standardized beta=0.059, P=0.026), maximal carotid IMT (standardized beta=0.084, P=0.006), or plaque height (standardized beta=0.093, P=0.008). CONCLUSIONS: The degree of systolic blood pressure reactivity to mental challenge is prospectively related to carotid IMT in middle-aged and older men, independent of known risk factors.
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Jaakko Mursu, Sari Voutilainen, Tarja Nurmi, Tiina H Rissanen, Jyrki K Virtanen, Jari Kaikkonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Dark chocolate consumption increases HDL cholesterol concentration and chocolate fatty acids may inhibit lipid peroxidation in healthy humans.   Free Radic Biol Med 37: 9. 1351-1359 Nov  
Abstract: Cocoa powder is rich in polyphenols and, thus, may contribute to the reduction of lipid peroxidation. Our aim was to study the effects of long-term ingestion of chocolate, with differing amounts of polyphenols, on serum lipids and lipid peroxidation ex vivo and in vivo. We conducted a 3 week clinical supplementation trial of 45 nonsmoking, healthy volunteers. Participants consumed 75 g daily of either white chocolate (white chocolate, WC group), dark chocolate (dark chocolate, DC group), or dark chocolate enriched with cocoa polyphenols (high-polyphenol chocolate, HPC group). In the DC and HPC groups, an increase in serum HDL cholesterol was observed (11.4% and 13.7%, respectively), whereas in the WC group there was a small decrease (-2.9%, p < 0.001). The concentration of serum LDL diene conjugates, a marker of lipid peroxidation in vivo, decreased 11.9% in all three study groups. No changes were seen in the total antioxidant capacity of plasma, in the oxidation susceptibility of serum lipids or VLDL + LDL, or in the concentration of plasma F2-isoprostanes or hydroxy fatty acids. Cocoa polyphenols may increase the concentration of HDL cholesterol, whereas chocolate fatty acids may modify the fatty acid composition of LDL and make it more resistant to oxidative damage.
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Minna Karpansalo, Pirjo Manninen, Jussi Kauhanen, Timo A Lakka, Jukka T Salonen (2004)  Perceived health as a predictor of early retirement.   Scand J Work Environ Health 30: 4. 287-292 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study examined the association between perceived health and early retirement. METHODS: A cohort of 1748 men aged 42 to 60 years from eastern Finland was followed from 1984 to 2000. At baseline, the participants had answered a questionnaire regarding their general (as measured by physician diagnoses) and perceived health status. Comprehensive pension records were obtained from the Social Insurance Institution of Finland and the Central Pension Security Institute. The risk of disability pensioning in various disease categories and nonillness-based early pensioning was analyzed using Cox regression modeling. RESULTS: Over 11 years, 855 (48.9%) men received a disability pension, and 331 (18.9%) received a nonillness-based early pension. Only 273 (15.6%) received an old age pension, without previous early pensioning. At the end of the follow-up, 289 (16.5%) were still working. After adjustment for potential confounders, men with poor perceived health at baseline had a relative risk of 2.37 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 1.79-3.13] for disability pensioning and the highest risk of disability was due to mental illness (RR 3.84, 95% CI 1.86-7.92), followed by musculoskeletal disorders and cardiovascular diseases. The relative risk of receiving a nonillness-based pension was 2.94 (95% CI 1.92-4.50) for this group. CONCLUSIONS: Self-assessed poor health is a strong predictor of early retirement due to mental disorders, musculoskeletal disorders, and cardiovascular diseases. Moreover, the risk of retirement on a nonillness-based pension is increased among those with poor perceived health.
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Tero Hallikainen, J Hietala, J Kauhanen, T Pohjalainen, E Syvälahti, J T Salonen, J Tiihonen (2003)  Ethanol consumption and DRD2 gene TaqI a polymorphism among socially drinking males.   Am J Med Genet A 119A: 2. 152-155 Jun  
Abstract: The dopaminergic system in the human brain is thought to play a major role in the development of alcohol consumption habits and alcoholism. It has been reported that homozygous D2-/- knock-out mice lacking D2 receptors consume about 50% to 60% less ethanol than wild-type D2+/+ mice, and heterozygous mice have an intermediate level of alcohol consumption. The DRD2 gene TaqI A polymorphism has been suggested to associate with a low D2 receptor density in post mortem and in vivo measurements. Numerous association studies on this polymorphism and alcoholism have shown most controversial results. We studied whether DRD2 TaqI A genotype affects alcohol consumption in an ethnically homogeneous, representative sample of 1,019 Finnish Caucasian males. After excluding the abstainers from the study, the self-reported alcohol consumption among the remaining 884 non-abstainers was compared in the TaqI A genotype groups (A1/A1, A1/A2, A2/A2). The alcohol consumption of the homozygous A1/A1 group was about 30% lower than in A1/A2 group, and 40% lower than in A2/A2 group (P = 0.042 and 0.041 in a sociodemographic variable-adjusted multivariate model). The results indicate an association between DRD2 genotype and alcohol consumption habits in humans. These results in the large sample of non-alcoholic males are also opposite to some previous findings on the higher A1 allele frequency among alcoholic populations.
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C Alagona, A Soro, J Westerbacka, K Ylitalo, J T Salonen, R Salonen, H Yki-Järvinen, M - R Taskinen (2003)  Low HDL cholesterol concentration is associated with increased intima-media thickness independent of arterial stiffness in healthy subjects from families with low HDL cholesterol.   Eur J Clin Invest 33: 6. 457-463 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) is associated with increased risk for developing coronary artery disease. Cardiovascular disease is characterized by increased intima-media thickness (IMT) and arterial stiffness, but the effect of low HDL on these measurements has not been reported. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied 18 apparently healthy subjects from families with low HDL-C and 18 control subjects, which were pair-matched to maximize statistical power. Intima-media thickness was assessed using ultrasound examination of the carotid arteries. Arterial stiffness was measured using applanation tonometry on the radial artery and pulse-wave analysis to obtain central aortic pulse-pressure waveform, from which the augmentation index, a measure of global large artery stiffness, was calculated. RESULTS: Low HDL subjects (age 41 +/- 3 years, BMI 26.6 +/- 1.0 kg m(-2) had significantly lower HDL-C than the control subjects (age 41 +/- 3 years, BMI 26.5 +/- 1.0 kg m-2; 1.00 +/- 0.05 vs. 1.49 +/- 0.09 mmol L-1, low HDL vs. control subjects, P < 0.0001). Subjects with low HDL-C had significantly thicker mean IMTs than the control subjects (0.77 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.70 +/- 0.02 mm, low HDL vs. control subjects, P < 0.01). The maximal (0.99 +/- 0.04 vs. 0.89 +/- 0.03 mm, P < 0.01), far wall (0.76 +/- 0.04 vs. 0.69 +/- 0.02 mm, P < 0.05) and carotid bulb (1.11 +/- 0.06 vs. 0.97 +/- 0.04 mm) IMTs were also significantly increased, whereas the mean common carotid and the internal artery IMT were not. The age-related increase in mean IMT was more pronounced in the low HDL subjects than the control subjects (P < 0.01 for difference between elevations of age vs. IMT slopes). There were no differences in central pressure augmentation, the augmentation index, peripheral or central blood pressures between the groups. CONCLUSIONS: A low HDL-C concentration is associated with thickening of carotid IMT independent of other risk factors in healthy affected members of low HDL families.
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Meri Vanharanta, Sari Voutilainen, Tiina H Rissanen, Herman Adlercreutz, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Risk of cardiovascular disease-related and all-cause death according to serum concentrations of enterolactone: Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Arch Intern Med 163: 9. 1099-1104 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Enterolactone is a plant-derived compound that has been associated with a reduced risk of acute coronary events and cancer. Several studies have suggested that serum enterolactone concentration may play a role as a biomarker of a diet high in fiber and vegetables. Owing to its phenolic structure, enterolactone and its plant lignan precursors, which are converted by intestinal bacteria to enterolactone, are potential antioxidants. METHODS: The associations between serum enterolactone level and the risk of coronary heart disease (CHD)-related, cardiovascular disease (CVD)-related, and all-cause mortality were investigated in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, which is a prospective population-based study of middle-aged Finnish men. The serum enterolactone concentration and cardiovascular risk factors were determined in 1889 men aged 42 to 60 years. In an average follow-up of 12.2 years, 70 CHD-related, 103 CVD-related, and 242 all-cause deaths occurred in participants free of prior CVD. RESULTS: Multivariate analyses showed significant associations between elevated serum enterolactone concentration and reduced risk of CHD- and CVD-related mortality, but weaker associations in relation to all-cause mortality. In the Cox proportional hazards regression model adjusting for the most potent confounding factors, the risk of CHD-related (P =.03 for trend) and CVD-related (P =.04 for trend) death decreased linearly across quartiles of serum enterolactone concentration. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that a high serum enterolactone level is associated with reduced CHD- and CVD-related mortality in middle-aged Finnish men. These results add to the evidence supporting the importance of whole grain foods, fruits, and vegetables in the prevention of premature death from CVD.
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Marja Marchesani, Anna Hakkarainen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Jari Kaikkonen, Eero Pukkala, Pekka Uimari, Eija Seppälä, Mika Matikainen, Olli-P Kallioniemi, Johanna Schleutker, Terho Lehtimäki, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  New paraoxonase 1 polymorphism I102V and the risk of prostate cancer in Finnish men.   J Natl Cancer Inst 95: 11. 812-818 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Human serum paraoxonase eliminates carcinogenic lipid-soluble radicals. Because expression of the main human paraoxonase gene PON1 varies widely in humans, certain PON1 polymorphisms might be associated with increased risks of cancer. We sought new functional mutations in PON1 and determined whether known or new PON1 mutations were associated with the risk for prostate cancer in a prospective, random, population-based sample of Finnish men and in a case-control study. METHODS: Serum paraoxonase activity was measured in 835 healthy men in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. PON1 mutations were identified by hierarchical phenotype-targeted sequencing in DNAs from the 100 men with the lowest paraoxonase activity in this cohort, and 1595 men in the cohort were genotyped for PON1 mutations by restriction fragment length polymorphism. Multivariable analysis was used to investigate the association of known and new PON1 mutations with incident prostate cancer in 1569 cancer-free men in the cohort followed for 9-14 years. In a case-control study of Finnish men, the association of prostate cancer with the PON1 mutation identified in the cohort study was investigated in 69 case patients with familial prostate cancer and 69 unmatched healthy control subjects. RESULTS: We identified a new single-nucleotide PON1 polymorphism associated with decreased serum paraoxonase activity that caused an isoleucine-->valine change at codon 102 in exon 4 (I102V). Of the 1569 men cancer-free at baseline, 56 (3.6%) were carriers of the I102V mutation. After adjusting for age and cholesterol-lowering medications, the relative risk for developing prostate cancer during follow-up was 6.3 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 2.1 to 19.2) among 102V allele carriers compared with noncarriers. Other PON1 alleles were not statistically significantly associated with prostate cancer. In the case-control study, patients with familial prostate cancer were more likely to be carriers of the PON1 I102V mutation than control subjects (odds ratio = 4.3, 95% CI = 0.9 to 21.5). CONCLUSION: The PON1 102V allele appears to be associated with an increased risk for prostate cancer.
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Tiina H Rissanen, Sari Voutilainen, Jyrki K Virtanen, Birgitta Venho, Meri Vanharanta, Jaakko Mursu, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Low intake of fruits, berries and vegetables is associated with excess mortality in men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study.   J Nutr 133: 1. 199-204 Jan  
Abstract: Diets rich in fruits and vegetables have been of interest because of their potential health benefits against chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer. The aim of this work was to assess the association of the dietary intake of a food group that includes fruits, berries and vegetables with all-cause, CVD-related and non-CVD-related mortality. The subjects were Finnish men aged 42-60 y examined in 1984-1989 in the prospective Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. Dietary intakes were assessed by 4-d food intake record during the baseline phase of the KIHD Study. The risk of all-cause and non-CVD-related deaths was studied in 2641 men and the risk of CVD-related death in 1950 men who had no history of CVD at baseline. During a mean follow-up time of 12.8 y, cardiovascular as well as noncardiovascular and all-cause mortality were lower among men with the highest consumption of fruits, berries and vegetables. After adjustment for the major CVD risk factors, the relative risk for men in the highest fifth of fruit, berry and vegetable intake for all-cause death, CVD-related and non-CVD-related death was 0.66 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.50-0.88], 0.59 (0.33-1.06), and 0.68 (0.46-1.00), respectively, compared with men in the lowest fifth. These data show that a high fruit, berry and vegetable intake is associated with reduced risk of mortality in middle-aged Finnish men. Consequently, the findings of this work indicate that diets that are rich in plant-derived foods can promote longevity.
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S Kurl, J A Laukkanen, T - P Tuomainen, R Rauramaa, T A Lakka, R Salonen, J Eränen, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2003)  Association of exercise-induced, silent ST-segment depression with the risk of stroke and cardiovascular diseases in men.   Stroke 34: 7. 1760-1765 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: There are few if any data on the prognostic importance of silent myocardial ischemia during exercise with regard to the risk of stroke and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) among asymptomatic men. In this prospective study, we investigated the relation of silent myocardial ischemia and the risk of stroke and CVD death in men with and without conventional risk factors. METHODS: The study sample included 1726 middle-aged men with no history of stroke, coronary heart disease, or atrial fibrillation at baseline. Silent myocardial ischemia was defined as a horizontal or downsloping ST-segment depression (>or=1 mm) during exercise electrocardiography. A total of 86 CVD-related deaths and 78 strokes occurred during an average follow-up of 10 years. RESULTS: Men with silent ischemia during exercise had a 3.5-fold increased risk of CVD death and a 2.2-fold increased risk of stroke compared with men without silent ischemia, after adjusting for conventional risk factors. Silent ischemia during exercise was associated with a 3.8-fold (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5 to 9.5) increased risk for CVD in smokers, a 3.9-fold (95% CI, 2.1 to 7.3) increased risk in hypercholesterolemic subjects, a 3.6-fold (95% CI, 1.9 to 6.8) increased risk in the hypertensives, and 3.8-fold (95% CI, 2.0 to 7.1) increased risk in overweight men. The respective relative risks for stroke were 3.8 (95% CI, 1.1 to 12.5), 3.5 (95% CI, 1.7 to 7.4), 3.4 (95% CI, 1.6 to 7.1), and 2.9 (95% CI, 1.4 to 6.1). CONCLUSIONS: Exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia is an important indicator of increased risk of stroke and CVD in men with other risk factors, such as smoking, hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, and being overweight.
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Tiina H Rissanen, Sari Voutilainen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Riitta Salonen, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Serum lycopene concentrations and carotid atherosclerosis: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Clin Nutr 77: 1. 133-138 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Interest in lycopene is growing rapidly following the recent publication of epidemiologic studies in which high circulating lycopene concentrations were associated with reductions in cardiovascular disease. Lycopene is one of the major carotenoids in the Western diet and is probably one of the protective factors in a vegetable-rich diet. OBJECTIVE: We studied the hypothesis that the intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery (CCA-IMT) would be greater in men with low serum lycopene concentrations. DESIGN: We investigated the relation between serum lycopene concentration and CCA-IMT in 1028 middle-aged men (aged 46-64 y) in eastern Finland who were participants in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor study and who were examined in 1991-1993. The subjects were classified into quarters according to serum lycopene concentration. RESULTS: In a covariance analysis with adjustment for covariates, the men in the lowest quarter of serum lycopene concentration had a significantly higher mean CCA-IMT and maximal CCA-IMT (P = 0.005 and P = 0.001 for the difference, respectively) than did the other men. The mean and maximal CCA-IMT increased linearly across the quarters of serum lycopene concentration. CONCLUSIONS: A low serum lycopene concentration is associated with a higher CCA-IMT in middle-aged men from eastern Finland. This finding suggests that the serum lycopene concentration may play a role in the early stages of atherosclerosis. Increased thickness of the intima-media has been shown to predict coronary events; thus, lycopene intakes and serum concentrations may have clinical and public health relevance.
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PMID 
Riitta M Salonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jari Kaikkonen, Elina Porkkala-Sarataho, Sari Voutilainen, Tiina H Rissanen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Ulla Ristonmaa, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Meri Vanharanta, Jukka T Salonen, Henrik E Poulsen (2003)  Six-year effect of combined vitamin C and E supplementation on atherosclerotic progression: the Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) Study.   Circulation 107: 7. 947-953 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Self-selected supplementation of vitamin E has been associated with reduced coronary events and atherosclerotic progression, but the evidence from clinical trials is controversial. In the first 3 years of the ASAP trial, the supplementation with 136 IU of vitamin E plus 250 mg of slow-release vitamin C twice daily slowed down the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in men but not women. This article examines the 6-year effect of supplementation on common carotid artery (CCA) intima-media thickness (IMT). METHODS AND RESULTS: The subjects were 520 smoking and nonsmoking men and postmenopausal women aged 45 to 69 years with serum cholesterol > or =5.0 mmol/L (193 mg/dL), 440 (84.6%) of whom completed the study. Atherosclerotic progression was assessed ultrasonographically. In covariance analysis in both sexes, supplementation reduced the main study outcome, the slope of mean CCA-IMT, by 26% (95% CI, 5 to 46, P=0.014), in men by 33% (95% CI, 4 to 62, P=0.024) and in women by 14% (not significant). In both sexes combined, the average annual increase of the mean CCA-IMT was 0.014 mm in the unsupplemented and 0.010 mm in the supplemented group (25% treatment effect, 95% CI, 2 to 49, P=0.034). In men, this treatment effect was 37% (95 CI, 4 to 69, P=0.028). The effect was larger in subjects with either low baseline plasma vitamin C levels or CCA plaques. Vitamin E had no effect on HDL cholesterol. CONCLUSIONS: These data replicate our 3-year findings confirming that the supplementation with combination of vitamin E and slow-release vitamin C slows down atherosclerotic progression in hypercholesterolemic persons.
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PMID 
Helle Bruunsgaard, Henrik E Poulsen, Bente K Pedersen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jari Kaikkonen, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Long-term combined supplementations with alpha-tocopherol and vitamin C have no detectable anti-inflammatory effects in healthy men.   J Nutr 133: 4. 1170-1173 Apr  
Abstract: Inflammatory and oxidative stresses play a pivotal role in atherogenesis. Vitamin E and vitamin C are the two most important dietary antioxidants; moreover, vitamin E has anti-inflammatory effects. Combined supplementations with vitamin E and vitamin C twice daily for 3 y reduced lipid peroxidation and retarded the progression of common carotid atherosclerosis in healthy men in the Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study. To further elucidate the underlying mechanisms that retarded the progression of atherosclerosis in the ASAP study, we investigated the effect of a combined intake of vitamin E and vitamin C on inflammatory markers in vivo. Circulating levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha, interleukin (IL)-6, and C reactive protein (CRP) were measured in 45- to 69-y-old men from the ASAP study with cholesterol >5.0 mmol/L before and after treatment with either placebo (n = 52) or a combined supplementation with 91 mg (136 IU) alpha-tocopherol and 250 mg of slow-release vitamin C twice a day (n = 55) for 3 y. Antioxidant treatment for 36 mo had no effect on circulating levels of TNF-alpha, IL-6 or CRP. In conclusion, long-term combined supplementations with alpha-tocopherol and vitamin C in reasonable doses have no detectable systemic anti-inflammatory effects in a healthy population of men with slight hypercholesterolemia and no overt signs of inflammation.
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PMID 
David E Laaksonen, Leo Niskanen, Kari Punnonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Riitta Salonen, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Sex hormones, inflammation and the metabolic syndrome: a population-based study.   Eur J Endocrinol 149: 6. 601-608 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Mild hypoandrogenism in men is associated with features of the metabolic syndrome, but the association with the metabolic syndrome itself using an accepted definition has not been described. DESIGN: Men with the metabolic syndrome were identified and testosterone and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG) levels were determined in a population-based cohort of 1896 non-diabetic middle-aged Finnish men. RESULTS: Calculated free testosterone and SHBG were 11% and 18% lower (P<0.001) in men with the metabolic syndrome (n=345, World Health Organisation definition). After categorisation by tertiles and adjusting for age and body mass index, total and free testosterone and SHBG were inversely associated with concentrations of insulin, glucose, triglycerides, C-reactive protein (CRP) and CRP-adjusted ferritin and positively associated with high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Men with free testosterone levels in the lowest third were 2.7 (95% confidence interval (CI) 2.0-3.7) times more likely to have the metabolic syndrome in age-adjusted analyses, and 1.7 (95% CI 1.2-2.4) times more likely even after further adjusting for body mass index. Exclusion of men with cardiovascular disease did not alter the association. The inverse association of SHBG with the metabolic syndrome was somewhat stronger. CONCLUSIONS: Low testosterone and SHBG levels were strongly associated not only with components of the metabolic syndrome, but also with the metabolic syndrome itself, independently of body mass index. Furthermore, sex hormones were associated with inflammation and body iron stores. Even in the absence of late-stage consequences such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease, subtle derangements in sex hormones are present in the metabolic syndrome, and may contribute to its pathogenesis.
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PMID 
Tarja Nurmi, Sari Voutilainen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Herman Adlercreutz, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Liquid chromatography method for plant and mammalian lignans in human urine.   J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci 798: 1. 101-110 Dec  
Abstract: Recently new mammalian lignan precursors were identified but no analysis methods are available for assay of those compounds in human urine. Previously published methods were developed for GC-MS about only two plant lignans were included. Consequently, a method for HPLC equipped with a coulometric electrode array detector was developed to measure plant and mammalian lignans in human urine. The plant lignans, secoisolariciresinol (Seco), matairesinol (Mat), lariciresinol (Lar), pinoresinol (Pin), syringaresinol (Syr) and isolariciresinol (IsoL) were included into the new method together with two mammalian lignans, enterolactone (Enl) and enterodiol (End). Validation of the method demonstrated that it could be applied to normal urine containing low amounts of plant lignans and moderate amounts of mammalian lignans, but the method was also applicable for samples from study subjects in supplementation studies, i.e. sample with very high concentrations of mammalian lignans. The method was found to be a useful tool for studies on plant lignan intake and the activity of micro flora in the metabolism of plant lignans.
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PMID 
Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Juha Laakso, Hannu Päivä, Terho Lehtimäki, Timo A Lakka, Marja Isomustajärvi, Inkeri Ruokonen, Jukka T Salonen, Reijo Laaksonen (2003)  Asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA) and risk of acute coronary events. Does statin treatment influence plasma ADMA levels?   Atheroscler Suppl 4: 4. 19-22 Dec  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the hypothesis that high serum levels of ADMA, an indicator of endothelial dysfunction, are associated with an elevated risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men. To test the hypothesis that lipid lowering medication with statins lowers circulating ADMA levels, we also investigated the effect of simvastatin and atorvastatin treatment on plasma ADMA concentration.In a prospective nested case-control study in 150 middle-aged non-smoking men from Eastern Finland, those who were in the highest quartile for serum ADMA (>0.62 micromol/l) had a 3.9-fold (95% CI: 1.25-12.3, P=0.02) increase in risk of acute coronary events compared with other quartiles. In an 8-week randomised double-blind placebo-controlled trial, plasma ADMA concentrations remained unchanged in simvastatin 80 mg/day (n=16), atorvastatin 40 mg/day (n=16) and placebo (n=16) groups over the study period.Our findings indicate that high serum levels of ADMA, a potential marker for endothelial dysfunction, may increase the risk of acute coronary syndromes. However, aggressive treatment with either simvastatin or atorvastatin did not reduce plasma ADMA levels.
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PMID 
David E Laaksonen, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, John Lynch, Timo A Lakka, Leo Niskanen, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen, Jussi Kauhanen (2003)  Cardiorespiratory fitness and vigorous leisure-time physical activity modify the association of small size at birth with the metabolic syndrome.   Diabetes Care 26: 7. 2156-2164 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Small size at birth has been associated with components of the metabolic syndrome, but little is known about the association with the metabolic syndrome itself or whether leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and cardiorespiratory fitness modify that association. We studied the association of size at birth with the metabolic syndrome. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Birth weight and length, the metabolic syndrome (World Health Organization criteria), LTPA over the previous 12 months, and VO(2max) were assessed in 462 nondiabetic middle-aged Finnish men who were part of a population-based cohort study. RESULTS: Men with a ponderal index (kg/m(3)) at birth in the lower third had higher fasting insulin and glucose levels than men in the upper third in age-adjusted analyses and were at least twofold more likely to have the metabolic syndrome, even in men without cardiovascular disease. Adjustment for childhood or adult socioeconomic status or adult BMI did not attenuate the association. Thinness at birth was even more clearly associated with hyperinsulinemia and the metabolic syndrome in men engaging in <25 min/wk of vigorous LTPA and in men with a VO(2max) <28.6 ml x kg(-1) x min(-1) or <2.44 l/min. In active and fit men, however, the association was absent. CONCLUSIONS: Small size at birth was associated with the metabolic syndrome in middle-aged men already before development of diabetes or cardiovascular disease. Thinness at birth may carry with it lifelong metabolic consequences, but regular strenuous physical activity and maintenance of cardiorespiratory fitness may alleviate or eliminate those consequences.
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PMID 
Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Ulf Diczfalusy, Jari Kaikkonen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Serum ferritin concentration is associated with plasma levels of cholesterol oxidation products in man.   Free Radic Biol Med 35: 8. 922-928 Oct  
Abstract: Cholesterol oxidation products, oxysterols, are thought to play a part in the initiation and development of human atherosclerotic lesions. Excessive body iron has been suggested to promote atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease through its pro-oxidative properties. In the present study, the associations between serum ferritin and plasma oxysterol concentrations were examined in 669 eastern Finnish men. Serum ferritin concentration had statistically significant (p <.05) direct correlations with most of the measured oxysterols. In multivariate adjusted regression models, serum ferritin concentration predicted significantly the levels of 27-hydroxycholesterol (beta = 0.13, p <.001), 7alpha-hydroxycholesterol (beta = 0.11, p =.005), 25-hydroxycholesterol (beta = 0.10, p =.007), 7-ketocholesterol (beta = 0.10, p =.009), and 7beta-hydroxycholesterol (beta = 0.10, p =.02). In conclusion, excess body iron, as assessed by serum ferritin, is associated with increased levels of circulating oxysterols, both of enzymatic and nonenzymatic origin, in man.
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DOI   
PMID 
Timo A Lakka, David E Laaksonen, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Niko Männikkö, Leo K Niskanen, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Sedentary lifestyle, poor cardiorespiratory fitness, and the metabolic syndrome.   Med Sci Sports Exerc 35: 8. 1279-1286 Aug  
Abstract: PURPOSE: The cross-sectional associations of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and cardiorespiratory fitness with the metabolic syndrome (MS) were investigated in a population-based sample of 1069 middle-aged men without diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or cancer. METHODS: LTPA was assessed using a detailed quantitative questionnaire. Maximal oxygen uptake VO(2max) and core and related features of the MS were determined. A modified World Health Organization definition of the MS and factor analysis were used. RESULTS: Men who engaged in at least moderate-intensity (>or=4.5 metabolic equivalents) LTPA <1.0 h.wk-1 were 60% more likely to have the MS than those engaging in >or= 3.0 h.wk-1 even after adjustment for confounders. Low-intensity (<4.5 metabolic equivalents) LTPA was not associated with the metabolic syndrome. Men with a VO(2max) <29.1 mL x kg-1 x min-1 were almost seven times more likely to have the MS than those with a VO(2max) >or=35.5 mL.kg-1.min-1 even after adjusting for confounders. In first-order factor analysis using a promax rotation, the principal factor explained 20% of total variance and had heavy loadings for VO(2max) (-0.57) and at least moderate-intensity LTPA (-0.44), and moderate or heavy loadings for the main components of the MS. The second-order factor analysis generated a principal factor that was strongly loaded on by the main components of the MS and VO(2max) (-0.50) but not LTPA. CONCLUSION: A sedentary lifestyle and especially poor cardiorespiratory fitness are not only associated with the MS but could also be considered features of the MS. Measurement of VO(2max) in sedentary men with risk factors may provide an efficient means for targeting individuals who would benefit from interventions to prevent the MS and its consequences.
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PMID 
Tommi Tolmunen, Sari Voutilainen, Jukka Hintikka, Tiina Rissanen, Antti Tanskanen, Heimo Viinamäki, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Dietary folate and depressive symptoms are associated in middle-aged Finnish men.   J Nutr 133: 10. 3233-3236 Oct  
Abstract: Several cross-sectional studies have focused on the low blood folate levels of depressed patients. However, no published studies have examined the association between dietary folate and current symptoms of depression in a general population. We investigated the association between dietary folate, cobalamin, pyridoxine and riboflavin and current symptoms of depression in a cross-sectional general population study. We recruited 2682 men aged between 42 and 60 y from eastern Finland. Those who had a previous history of psychiatric disorder were excluded (n = 146, 5.6% of the cohort). Depressive symptoms were assessed with the 18-item Human Population Laboratory Depression Scale. Those who scored 5 or more at baseline were considered to have elevated depressive symptoms (n = 228, 9.3% of the cohort). The participants were grouped into thirds according to their dietary folate intake. Those in the lowest third of energy-adjusted folate intake had a higher risk of being depressed [odds ratio (OR) 1.67, 95% CI = 1.19-2.35, P = 0.003] than those in the highest folate intake third. This increased risk remained significant after adjustment for smoking habits, alcohol consumption, appetite, BMI, marital status, education, adulthood socioeconomic status and total fat consumption (OR = 1.46, 95% CI = 1.01-2.12, P = 0.044). There were no associations between the intake of cobalamin, pyridoxine or riboflavin, and depression. These results indicate that nutrition may have a role in the prevention of depression.
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PMID 
M Karpansalo, T A Lakka, P Manninen, J Kauhanen, R Rauramaa, J T Salonen (2003)  Cardiorespiratory fitness and risk of disability pension: a prospective population based study in Finnish men.   Occup Environ Med 60: 10. 765-769 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Early retiring is a major social problem in many western countries. AIM: To investigate whether good cardiorespiratory fitness prevents disability pensioning in Finnish middle-aged men. METHODS: Subjects were a random population based sample of 1307 men who were 42-60 years old at baseline, had not retired before baseline or died during follow up, and had undergone a cycle ergometer test at baseline. Cardiorespiratory fitness was assessed at baseline with a maximal but symptom limited exercise test on an electrically braked cycle ergometer. RESULTS: During a follow up of 11 years on average, 790 (60.4%) men were awarded a disability pension, only 254 (19.4%) men reached the old-age pension without previous early pension, and 263 (20.1%) men were still working at the end of follow up. After adjustment for age, body mass index, alcohol consumption, smoking, education, occupation, and baseline chronic diseases, an inverse association was observed between cardiorespiratory fitness and the risk of disability pension. Men with VO2max <25.98 ml/kg/min (lowest fifth) had a 3.28-fold (95% CI 1.70 to 6.32) and men with the duration of exercise test <9.54 minutes (lowest fifth) had a 4.66-fold (95% CI 2.43 to 8.92) risk of disability pension due to cardiovascular diseases compared with men in the highest fifths. Men with lowest fitness level also had an increased risk of disability pension due to musculoskeletal disorders, or all reasons combined. CONCLUSIONS: Physical fitness is inversely associated with the risk of disability pension and especially with the risk of disability due to cardiovascular diseases.
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DOI   
PMID 
Sudhir Kurl, Jari A Laukkanen, Rainer Rauramaa, Timo A Lakka, Juhani Sivenius, Jukka T Salonen (2003)  Cardiorespiratory fitness and the risk for stroke in men.   Arch Intern Med 163: 14. 1682-1688 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Low cardiorespiratory fitness is considered to be a major public health problem. We examined the relationship of cardiorespiratory fitness, as indicated by maximum oxygen consumption VO(2)max with subsequent incidence of stroke. We also compared VO(2)max with conventional risk factors as a predictor for future strokes. METHODS: Population-based cohort study with an average follow-up of 11 years from Kuopio and surrounding communities of eastern Finland. Of 2011 men with no stroke or pulmonary disease at baseline who participated in the study, 110 strokes occurred, of which 87 were ischemic. The VO(2)max was measured directly during exercise testing at baseline. RESULTS: The relative risk for any stroke in unfit men VO(2)max, <25.2 mL/kg per minute) was 3.2 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.71-6.12; P<.001; P<.001 for the trend across the quartiles); and for ischemic stroke, 3.50 (95% CI, 1.66-7.41; P =.001; P<.001 for trend across the quartiles), compared with fit men VO(2)max, >35.3 mL/kg per minute), after adjusting for age and examination year. The associations remained statistically significant after further adjustment for smoking, alcohol consumption, socioeconomic status, energy expenditure of physical activity, prevalent coronary heart disease, diabetes, systolic blood pressure, and serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level for any strokes or ischemic strokes. Low cardiorespiratory fitness was comparable with systolic blood pressure, obesity, alcohol consumption, smoking, and serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level as a risk factor for stroke. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings show that low cardiorespiratory fitness was associated with an increased risk for any stroke and ischemic stroke. The VO(2)max was one of the strongest predictors of stroke, comparable with other modifiable risk factors.
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2002
 
DOI   
PMID 
H - M Lakka, T A Lakka, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (2002)  Abdominal obesity is associated with increased risk of acute coronary events in men.   Eur Heart J 23: 9. 706-713 May  
Abstract: AIMS: The purpose of the study was to investigate the associations of abdominal obesity and overall obesity with the risk of acute coronary events. METHODS AND RESULTS: Body mass index indicating overall obesity and waist-to-hip ratio and waist circumference indicating abdominal obesity were measured for 1346 Finnish men aged 42-60 years who had neither cardiovascular disease nor cancer at baseline. There were 123 acute coronary events during an average follow-up of 10.6 years. In Cox regression analyses adjusted for confounding factors, waist-to-hip ratio (P=0.009), waist circumference (P=0.010) and body mass index (P=0.013) as continuous variables were associated directly with the risk of coronary events. These associations were in part explained by blood pressure, diabetes, fasting serum insulin, serum lipids, plasma fibrinogen, and serum uric acid. Waist-to-hip ratio of > or =0.91 was associated with a nearly threefold risk of coronary events. Waist-to-hip ratio provided additional information beyond body mass index in predicting coronary heart disease, whereas body mass index did not add to the predictive value of waist-to-hip ratio. Abdominal obesity combined with smoking and poor cardiorespiratory fitness increased the risk of coronary events 5.5 and 5.1 times, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Abdominal obesity is an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease in middle-aged men and even more important than overall obesity. Since the effect of abdominal obesity was strongest in smoking and unfit men, the strategy for lifestyle modification to prevent coronary heart disease should address these issues jointly.
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PMID 
Takuya Saito, Herbert M Lachman, Libna Diaz, Tero Hallikainen, Jussi Kauhanen, Jukka T Salonen, Olli-Pekka Ryynänen, Matti K Karvonen, Erkka Syvälahti, Tiina Pohjalainen, Jarmo Hietala, Jari Tiihonen (2002)  Analysis of monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) promoter polymorphism in Finnish male alcoholics.   Psychiatry Res 109: 2. 113-119 Mar  
Abstract: Alterations in monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) expression and enzyme activity may be associated with alcoholism and impulsive behavior. Therefore, functional polymorphisms in the MAOA gene would be good candidates to consider in the interindividual differences that exist in the susceptibility to alcoholism. One variant that has been considered as a candidate in alcoholism is a repeat polymorphism in the MAOA gene promoter. We analyzed a cohort of Finnish males with either type 1 or type 2 alcoholism, as well as controls, for differences in the distribution of MAOA promoter alleles. Based on other studies, we postulated that type 2 alcoholism, which is associated with antisocial behavior, but not type 1 alcoholism, would be correlated with the inheritance of the low promoter activity allele. However, we failed to find a difference in allele distribution in type 1 and type 2 alcoholics. In addition, there was no difference in the allele distribution when each group of alcoholics was compared with controls. However, when both groups of alcoholics were pooled and compared with controls, the difference in allele distribution reached a trend towards significance. Our results suggest a minimal association between the MAOA low activity promoter alleles and alcoholism, regardless of the presence or absence of antisocial behavior. Interestingly, approximately 3% of type 2 alcoholics were found to be heterozygous for the MAOA promoter polymorphism. Since MAOA is X-linked, the heterozygotes are probable cases of Klinefelter's syndrome (47,XXY) suggesting that X-chromosome aneuploidy may increase the risk for developing type 2 alcoholism.
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PMID 
Sam Harper, John Lynch, Wan-Ling Hsu, Susan A Everson, Marianne M Hillemeier, Trivellore E Raghunathan, Jukka T Salonen, George A Kaplan (2002)  Life course socioeconomic conditions and adult psychosocial functioning.   Int J Epidemiol 31: 2. 395-403 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Various psychosocial factors have been linked to adult physical health and are also associated with socioeconomic position in adulthood. We evaluated the effect of socioeconomic conditions over the life course on measures of psychosocial functioning in adulthood. METHODS: Life course socioeconomic position was assessed by retrospective recall of parents' education and occupation when the respondent was age 10, and the respondents' education, occupation, and income in 2585 men from eastern Finland aged 42, 48, 54, and 60 years. Measures of psychosocial functioning were derived from scales measuring cynical hostility, hopelessness, and depressive symptoms. RESULTS: Men with both parents who had less than a primary school education or who both had unskilled manual jobs had higher age-adjusted levels of cynical hostility, hopelessness, and depressive symptoms in adulthood. Mutually adjusted analyses showed that parents' education and the respondents' education, occupation, and income all had statistically independent effects on adult levels of cynical hostility and hopelessness. For instance, men for whom neither parent had completed primary education had a 0.15 standard deviation (P = 0.006) higher cynical hostility score, and a 0.20 standard deviation (P = 0.00018) higher hopelessness score, after adjustment for education, occupation and income. In contrast, depressive symptoms in adulthood were only associated with the respondent's occupation and income. CONCLUSIONS: Childhood socioeconomic position was associated with adult psychosocial functioning, but these effects were specific to some aspects of adult psychosocial functioning--cynical hostility and hopelessness, but not depressive symptoms. Adult occupation and income were associated with all measures of psychosocial functioning. In addition to the impact of adult socioeconomic position, some aspects of poor psychosocial functioning in adulthood may also have socioeconomic roots early in life.
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PMID 
Kati Ylitalo, Mikko Syvänne, Riitta Salonen, Ilpo Nuotio, Marja-Riitta Taskinen, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Carotid artery intima-media thickness in Finnish families with familial combined hyperlipidemia.   Atherosclerosis 162: 1. 171-178 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Familial combined hyperlipidemia (FCHL) is the most common hereditary lipid disorder that predisposes the patients to premature coronary heart disease. Members of FCHL families are categorised as affected or unaffected according to serum lipid levels. This study is aimed to evaluate whether there is a difference in carotid artery wall thickness between asymptomatic FCHL family members who are affected and those who are unaffected according to the currently used lipid criteria. METHODS AND RESULTS: Carotid artery ultrasonography with intima-media thickness (IMT) measurements was performed for 148 members of 39 Finnish FCHL families. Study subjects who had no history of coronary heart disease or stroke were divided into two groups according to their serum total cholesterol and/or triglyceride levels. The average carotid IMT of the affected subjects (0.75+/-0.15 mm) was not significantly different from that of their unaffected relatives (0.73+/-0.13 mm), P=0.90. In multivariate analysis, age, gender, and pulse pressure, but no lipid variables, contributed significantly to the variation of carotid IMT. CONCLUSIONS: The IMT findings in FCHL family members indicate that the current lipid criteria alone are of limited value in predicting long-term risk of cardiovascular disease in asymptomatic members of FCHL families.
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PMID 
D E Laaksonen, T A Lakka, H - M Lakka, K Nyyssönen, T Rissanen, L K Niskanen, J T Salonen (2002)  Serum fatty acid composition predicts development of impaired fasting glycaemia and diabetes in middle-aged men.   Diabet Med 19: 6. 456-464 Jun  
Abstract: AIMS: Dietary fatty acid intake is reflected in serum fatty acid composition. Studies prospectively investigating serum fatty acids and development of impaired fasting glycaemia (IFG) or diabetes mellitus (DM) are largely lacking. We assessed the association of serum fatty acid composition with development of IFG or DM. METHODS: Middle-aged normoglycaemic men (n = 895) participating in a prospective cohort study were followed up after 4 years. RESULTS: At baseline proportions of serum esterified and non-esterified saturated fatty acids were increased and polyunsaturated fatty acids decreased in men who after 4 years had developed IFG (n = 56) or DM (n = 34). No differences in dietary fatty acid composition as recorded in 4-day dietary records were noted. In logistic regression analyses adjusting for age; obesity; and fasting lipid, glucose and insulin concentrations, men with proportions of non-esterified and esterified linoleate in the upper third had nearly half the risk for IFG or DM compared with the lower third. In covariate analyses, baseline non-esterified linoleate proportions were associated with changes in fasting insulin and glucose concentrations over the 4-year follow-up. Baseline esterified fatty acid composition was also associated with changes in insulin. CONCLUSIONS: High serum linoleate proportions decreased the risk of developing IFG or DM in middle-aged men over a 4-year follow-up, possibly mediated in part by insulin resistance. These findings support recommendations to substitute vegetable fat for animal and dairy fat in the prevention of disturbances of glucose and lipid metabolism.
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PMID 
Meri Vanharanta, Sari Voutilainen, Tarja Nurmi, Jari Kaikkonen, L Jackson Roberts, Jason D Morrow, Herman Adlercreutz, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Association between low serum enterolactone and increased plasma F2-isoprostanes, a measure of lipid peroxidation.   Atherosclerosis 160: 2. 465-469 Feb  
Abstract: Evidence suggests that low serum enterolactone concentration might be an independent risk factor for acute coronary events. Enterolactone is a lignan, which is formed by intestinal bacteria from precursors in plant foods. Due to the biphenolic structure of enterolactone, it could act as an antioxidant and through this contribute to cardiovascular health. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that a low serum enterolactone concentration is associated with increased in vivo lipid peroxidation, assessed by plasma F2-isoprostane concentrations. We investigated this association in a subset of participants in 'The Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention' (ASAP) study. Out of 256 male participants a subsample of 100 consecutive men from baseline was selected for F2-isoprostane assays. The mean serum enterolactone concentration was 16.6 nmol/l and that of F2-isoprostanes 29.6 ng/l. The correlation coefficient for association between serum enterolactone and F2-isoprostane concentrations was -0.30 (P<0.003). Plasma F2-isoprostane levels decreased linearly across quintiles of serum enterolactone concentration (P=0.008 for a linear trend). In a multivariate model, enterolactone persisted as a significant predictor after adjustment for vitamins and other variables, with the strongest associations with F2-isoprostanes. Our present data suggest that low serum enterolactone concentration is associated with enhanced in vivo lipid peroxidation in men.
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PMID 
S Kurl, T P Tuomainen, J A Laukkanen, K Nyyssönen, T Lakka, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2002)  Plasma vitamin C modifies the association between hypertension and risk of stroke.   Stroke 33: 6. 1568-1573 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: There are no prospective studies to determine whether plasma vitamin C modifies the risk of stroke among hypertensive and overweight individuals. We sought to examine whether plasma vitamin C modifies the association between overweight and hypertension and the risk of stroke in middle-aged men from eastern Finland. METHODS: We conducted a 10.4-year prospective population-based cohort study of 2419 randomly selected middle-aged men (42 to 60 years) with no history of stroke at baseline examination. A total of 120 men developed a stroke, of which 96 were ischemic and 24 hemorrhagic strokes. RESULTS: Men with the lowest levels of plasma vitamin C (<28.4 micromol/L, lowest quarter) had a 2.4-fold (95% CI, 1.4 to 4.3; P=0.002) risk of any stroke compared with men with highest levels of plasma vitamin C (>64.96 micromol/L, highest quarter) after adjustment for age and examination months. An additional adjustment for body mass index, systolic blood pressure, smoking, alcohol consumption, serum total cholesterol, diabetes, and exercise-induced myocardial ischemia attenuated the association marginally (relative risk, 2.1; 95% CI, 1.2 to 3.8; P=0.01). Adjustment for prevalent coronary heart disease and atrial fibrillation did not attenuate the association any further. Furthermore, hypertensive men with the lowest vitamin C levels (<28.4 micromol/L) had a 2.6-fold risk (95% CI, 1.52 to 4.48; P<0.001), and overweight men (> or =25 kg/m2) with low plasma vitamin C had a 2.7-fold risk (95% CI, 1.48 to 4.90; P=0.001) for any stroke after adjustment for age, examination months, and other risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Low plasma vitamin C was associated with increased risk of stroke, especially among hypertensive and overweight men.
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PMID 
Ming-Lin Liu, Kati Ylitalo, Ilpo Nuotio, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen, Marja-Riitta Taskinen (2002)  Association between carotid intima-media thickness and low-density lipoprotein size and susceptibility of low-density lipoprotein to oxidation in asymptomatic members of familial combined hyperlipidemia families.   Stroke 33: 5. 1255-1260 May  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: In addition to low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, small, dense LDL particles and oxidative modification of LDL have been linked to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. The present study was aimed at investigating the association between carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT) and LDL particle size and susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro in asymptomatic members of familial combined hyperlipidemia (FCHL) families. METHODS: LDL particle size, susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro, and carotid IMT were measured in 148 asymptomatic FCHL family members. RESULTS: LDL particle size and lag time for LDL oxidation were reduced in hyperlipidemic compared with normolipidemic family members. LDL particle size, serum total cholesterol, and alpha-tocopherol in LDL were independently associated with lag time for LDL oxidation in multivariate analysis. LDL particle size was associated with carotid mean IMT independently of clinical, lipid, and antioxidant variables in multivariate analysis. Although the susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro was correlated with mean IMT, it did not have a significant independent contribution to variation in mean IMT in the multivariate model. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that LDL particle size but not susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro is independently associated with carotid IMT in asymptomatic FCHL family members. These results imply that small, dense LDL as an inherent feature of FCHL is an important diagnostic indicator for coronary artery disease risk in FCHL.
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M L Bots, Y Nikitin, J T Salonen, P C Elwood, S Malyutina, A Freire de Concalves, J Sivenius, A Di Carlo, P Lagiou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  Left ventricular hypertrophy and risk of fatal and non-fatal stroke. EUROSTROKE: a collaborative study among research centres in Europe.   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i8-13 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: This study investigated the association between electrocardiographically assessed left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) and fatal, non-fatal, haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke in four European cohorts participating in EUROSTROKE. METHODS: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative project among ongoing European cohort studies to investigate differences in incidence of, and risk factors for, stroke between countries. EUROSTROKE is designed as a nested case-control study. For each stroke case, two controls were sampled. Strokes were classified according to MONICA criteria or reviewed by a panel of four neurologists. LVH was assessed according to the Minnesota code or the automated diagnostic MEANS classification system. For this analysis, data on LVH and stroke were available from cohorts in Cardiff (84 cases/200 controls), Kuopio (60/116), Rotterdam (114/334), and Novosibirsk (62/168). Results are adjusted for age and sex. RESULTS: LVH was associated with a twofold increased risk of stroke (odds ratio 2.1 (95% CI 1.3 to 3.5). The risk was particularly pronounced for fatal stroke (4.0 (95% CI 2.1 to 7.9)), whereas the risk was non-significantly increased for non-fatal stroke (1.5 (95% CI 0.8 to 2.7)). The increased risk was more pronounced in smokers: for total stroke 3.5 (95% CI 1.5 to 8.1) versus 1.6 (95% CI 0.8 to 3.1) in non-smokers. Adjustment for systolic blood pressure and body mass index attenuated the associations. LVH was not preferentially associated with a particular type of stroke, although the association with cerebral infarction was stronger. CONCLUSION: This analysis of the EUROSTROKE project indicates that LVH assessed by electrocardiogram is a predictor of stroke. The association seems to be stronger for fatal stroke than for non-fatal stroke and is more pronounced in smokers.
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Jari Kaikkonen, Tomi-Pekka Tuomainen, Kristiina Nyyssonen, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Coenzyme Q10: absorption, antioxidative properties, determinants, and plasma levels.   Free Radic Res 36: 4. 389-397 Apr  
Abstract: The purpose of this article is to summarise our studies, in which the main determinants and absorption of plasma coenzyme Q10 (Q10, ubiquinone) have been assessed, and the effects of moderate dose oral Q10 supplementation on plasma antioxidative capacity, lipoprotein oxidation resistance and on plasma lipid peroxidation investigated. All the supplementation trials carried out have been blinded and placebo-controlled clinical studies. Of the determinants of Q10, serum cholesterol, serum triglycerides, male gender, alcohol consumption and age were found to be associated positively with plasma Q10 concentration. A single dose of 30 mg of Q10, which is the maximum daily dose recommended by Q10 producers, had only a marginal elevating effect on plasma Q10 levels in non-Q10-deficient subjects. Following supplementation, a dose-dependent increase in plasma Q10 levels was observed up to a daily dose of 200 mg, which resulted in a 6.1-fold increase in plasma Q10 levels. However, simultaneous supplementation with vitamin E resulted in lower plasma Q10 levels. Of the lipid peroxidation measurements, Q10 supplementation did not increase LDL TRAP, plasma TRAP, VLDL+LDL oxidation resistance nor did it decrease LDL oxidation susceptibility ex vivo. Q10 with minor vitamin E dose neither decreased exercise-induced lipid peroxidation ex vivo nor muscular damage. Q10 supplementation might, however, decrease plasma lipid peroxidation in vivo, as assessed by the increased proportion of plasma ubiquinol (reduced form, Q10H2) of total Q10. High dose vitamin E supplementation decreased this proportion, which suggests in vivo regeneration of tocopheryl radicals by ubiquinol.
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Gavin Turrell, John W Lynch, George A Kaplan, Susan A Everson, Eeva-Liisa Helkala, Jussi Kauhanen, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Socioeconomic position across the lifecourse and cognitive function in late middle age.   J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci 57: 1. S43-S51 Jan  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To examine the influence of childhood and adult socioeconomic position, socioeconomic mobility, and cumulative disadvantage across the lifecourse on cognitive function in late middle age. METHODS: Cross-sectional population-based study of 486 men age 58 and 64 from eastern Finland. Respondent's socioeconomic position in childhood was measured using parent's education and occupation, and respondent's position in adulthood was indicated by attained education and personal income. Cognitive function was assessed using five neuropsychological tests: Trail Making, Selective Reminding, Verbal Fluency, Visual Reproduction, and the Mini-Mental State Exam. RESULTS: Each indicator of socioeconomic position made statistically independent contributions to levels of cognitive function: Respondents from poor childhood backgrounds, and those who attained a limited education and earned a low income, performed worst on each test. Men who occupied a disadvantaged socioeconomic position in childhood and then experienced upward mobility over the lifecourse exhibited better cognitive performance than those with similar socioeconomic origins but limited or no upward mobility. Conversely, men from advantaged childhood backgrounds who later in life experienced downward mobility scored poorer on each cognitive test than their counterparts who remained in the most advantaged groups throughout the lifecourse. There was a strong, graded association between cumulative socioeconomic disadvantage and cognitive function: Men who occupied a low socioeconomic position during both childhood and adulthood scored worse on every test than those who occupied a high position at all points in their lives. DISCUSSION: Socioeconomic conditions across all stages of the lifecourse appear to make unique contributions to cognitive function in late middle age. These results also suggest that in terms of cognitive function, origin is not necessarily destiny, as disadvantaged socioeconomic circumstances in childhood may be overcome to some extent by upward mobility later in life.
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M L Bots, P C Elwood, Y Nikitin, J T Salonen, A Freire de Concalves, D Inzitari, J Sivenius, A Trichopoulou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  The EUROSTROKE cohorts: a short description and data analytical approach.   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i2-i7 Feb  
Abstract: This paper describes the design and methodology of the participating cohorts in the EUROSTROKE project. Information is given about the cohort sampling, its size, the follow up procedures and event classification. Information is also given about the measurement of the cardiovascular and cerebrovascular risk factors in each of the cohorts separately. The cohorts described are the Caerphilly study in Cardiff, United Kingdom; the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart disease study in Kuopio, Finland; the Portugal study in Coimbra, Portugal; the EPIC cohort in Athens, Greece; the Ilsa study from Firenze, Italy; the Rotterdam Study in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and the Novosibirsk cohort in Novosibirsk, Russia.
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PMID 
M L Bots, P C Elwood, J T Salonen, A Freire de Concalves, J Sivenius, A Di Carlo, Y Nikitin, V Benetou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  Level of fibrinogen and risk of fatal and non-fatal stroke. EUROSTROKE: a collaborative study among research centres in Europe.   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i14-i18 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: It is well established that raised levels of fibrinogen increase the risk of coronary heart disease. For stroke, however, data are much more limited and restricted to overall stroke. This study investigated the association between fibrinogen and fatal, non-fatal, haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke in three European cohorts participating in EUROSTROKE. METHODS: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative project among ongoing European cohort studies on incidence and risk factors of stroke. EUROSTROKE is designed as a nested case-control study. For each stroke case, two controls were sampled. Strokes were classified according to MONICA criteria or reviewed by a panel of four neurologists. Recently, data on stroke and fibrinogen became available from cohorts in Cardiff (79 cases/194 controls), Kuopio (74/124), and Rotterdam (62/203). Results were adjusted for age, sex, smoking, and systolic blood pressure. RESULTS: The risk of stroke gradually increased with increasing fibrinogen levels: the odds ratios per quartile increase were 1.08 (95% CI 0.63 to 1.84), 1.91 (1.12 to 3.26) and 2.78 (1.64 to 4.72), respectively. This association was similar for ischaemic (n=138) and haemorrhagic stroke (n=25). Associations between fibrinogen and stroke were similar across strata of smoking, diabetes mellitus, previous myocardial infarction, and HDL cholesterol. The odds ratio, however, tended to increase with increasing systolic blood pressure: from 1.21 among those with a systolic pressure <120 mm Hg to 1.99 among subjects with a systolic pressure of 160 mm Hg or above. CONCLUSION: This analysis of the EUROSTROKE project indicates that fibrinogen is a powerful predictor of stroke. Results did not disclose a differential in this relation of fibrinogen and fatal or non-fatal stroke, or with type of stroke (ischaemic or haemorrhagic).
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PMID 
M L Bots, J T Salonen, P C Elwood, Y Nikitin, A Freire de Concalves, D Inzitari, J Sivenius, A Trichopoulou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  Gamma-glutamyltransferase and risk of stroke: the EUROSTROKE project.   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i25-i29 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Alcohol consumption has been implicated in the aetiology of stroke. As data on alcohol consumption obtained by questionnaire are susceptible to misclassification, this study evaluated the association between gamma-glutamyltransferase (gamma-GT), as a marker for alcohol consumption, and fatal, non-fatal, haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke in three European cohort studies, participating in EUROSTROKE. METHODS: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative project among ongoing European cohort studies on incidence and risk factors of stroke. EUROSTROKE is designed as a nested case-control study. For each stroke case, two controls were sampled. Strokes were classified according to MONICA criteria or reviewed by a panel of four neurologists. At present, data on stroke and gamma-GT were available from cohorts in Cardiff (57 cases), Kuopio (66 cases), and Rotterdam (108 cases). RESULTS: An increase in gamma-GT of one standard deviation (28.7 IU/ml) was associated with an age and sex adjusted 26% (95% CI 5 to 53) increase in risk of stroke. Adjustment for confounding variables such as drug use, history of myocardial infarction, total cholesterol, and diabetes mellitus did not materially attenuate the association. The risk of haemorrhagic stroke increased linearly with increase in gamma-GT. The association for cerebral infarction was not graded: the risk increased beyond the first quartile, and remained increased. The association of gamma-GT with stroke was significantly stronger among subjects without diabetes mellitus compared with subjects with diabetes mellitus (no association observed). CONCLUSION: This EUROSTROKE analysis showed that an increased gamma-GT, as a marker of alcohol consumption, is associated with increased risk of stroke, in particular haemorrhagic stroke.
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PMID 
M L Bots, P C Elwood, Y Nikitin, J T Salonen, A Freire de Concalves, D Inzitari, J Sivenius, V Benetou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  Total and HDL cholesterol and risk of stroke. EUROSTROKE: a collaborative study among research centres in Europe.   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i19-i24 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Controversy remains on the relation between serum lipids levels and stroke risk. This paper investigated the association of total and HDL cholesterol level to fatal and non-fatal, and haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke in four European cohorts participating in EUROSTROKE. METHODS: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative project among ongoing European cohort studies on incidence and risk factors of stroke. EUROSTROKE is designed as a nested case-control study. For each stroke case, two controls were sampled. Strokes were classified according to MONICA criteria or reviewed by a panel of four neurologists. At present, data on stroke and risk factors were available from cohorts in Cardiff (84 cases), Kuopio (74 cases), Rotterdam (157 cases), and Novosibirsk (79 cases). RESULTS: Pooled analyses showed no significant association between total cholesterol and risk of stroke (odds ratio for increase of 1 mmol/l in cholesterol of 0.98 (95% CI 0.88 to 1.09)). Analyses for haemorrhagic stroke and cerebral infarction revealed odds ratios of 0.80 (95% CI 0.61 to 1.05) and 1.06 (95% CI 0.94 to 1.19), respectively. The association of HDL cholesterol to stroke was different in men compared with women. In men, there was a general trend towards a lower risk of stroke with an increase in HDL (odds ratio per 1 mmol/l increase in HDL cholesterol 0.68 (95% CI 0.40 to 1.16)). In women, however, an increase in HDL was associated with a significant increased risk of non-fatal stroke and of cerebral infarction (odds ratios of 2.46 (95% 0.1.20 to 5.04) and 2.52 (95% CI 1.15 to 5.50), respectively. The difference between men and women in the association of HDL with stroke seemed to differ mainly in smokers and never smokers, but not among ex smokers. CONCLUSION: This analysis of the EUROSTROKE project could not disclose an association of total cholesterol with fatal, non-fatal, haemorrhagic or ischaemic stroke. HDL cholesterol however, seemed to be related to stroke differently in men than in women.
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K G M Moons, M L Bots, J T Salonen, P C Elwood, A Freire de Concalves, Y Nikitin, J Sivenius, D Inzitari, V Benetou, J Tuomilehto, P J Koudstaal, D E Grobbee (2002)  Prediction of stroke in the general population in Europe (EUROSTROKE): Is there a role for fibrinogen and electrocardiography?   J Epidemiol Community Health 56 Suppl 1: i30-i36 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To decide whether a person with certain characteristics should be given any kind of intervention to prevent a cardiovascular event, it would be helpful to classify subjects in low, medium and high risk categories. The study evaluated which well known cerebrovascular and cardiovascular correlates, in particular fibrinogen level and ECG characteristics, are able to predict the occurrence of stroke in men of the general population using data from three European cohorts participating in EUROSTROKE. METHODS: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative project among ongoing European population based cohort studies and designed as a prospective nested case-control study. For each stroke case two controls were sampled. Strokes were classified according to MONICA criteria or reviewed by a panel of four neurologists. Complete data were available of 698 men (219 stroke events) from cohorts in Cardiff (84 cases/200 controls), Kuopio (74/148) and Rotterdam (61/131). Multivariable logistic regression modeling was used to evaluate which information from history, physical examination (for example, blood pressure), blood lipids, and fibrinogen and ECG measurements independently contributed to the prediction of stroke. The area under receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC area) was used to estimate the predictive ability of models. RESULTS: Independent predictors from medical history and physical examination were age, stroke history, medically treated hypertension, smoking, diabetes mellitus and diastolic blood pressure. The ROC area of this model was 0.69. After validating and transforming this model to an easy applicable rule, 40% of all future stroke cases could be predicted. Adding pulse rate, body mass index, blood lipids, fibrinogen level and ECG parameters did not improve the classification of subjects in low, medium and high risk. Results were similar when fibrinogen was dichotomised at the upper tertile or quintile. CONCLUSION: In the general male population the future occurrence of stroke may be predicted using easy obtainable information from medical history and physical examination. Measurement of pulse rate, body mass index, blood lipids, fibrinogen level and ECG characteristics do not contribute to the risk stratification of stroke and have no value in the screening for stroke in the general male population.
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Tiina Rissanen, Sari Voutilainen, Kristiina Nyyssönen, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Lycopene, atherosclerosis, and coronary heart disease.   Exp Biol Med (Maywood) 227: 10. 900-907 Nov  
Abstract: Diets rich in fruits and vegetables containing carotenoids have been of interest because of their potential health benefit against chronic diseases such as cardiovascular diseases (CVD) and cancer. Interest particularly in lycopene is growing rapidly following the recent publication of epidemiological studies that have associated high lycopene levels with reductions in CVD incidence. Two studies were conducted. In the first one, we examined the role of lycopene as a risk-lowering factor with regard to acute coronary events and stroke in the prospective Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor (KIHD) Study. The subjects were 725 middle-aged men free of coronary heart disease and stroke at the study baseline. In a Cox's proportional hazards' model adjusting for covariates, men in the lowest quartile of serum levels of lycopene had a 3.3-fold (P < 0.001) risk of the acute coronary event or stroke as compared with others. In the second study, we assessed the association between plasma concentration of lycopene and intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery wall (CCA-IMT) in a cross-sectional analysis of the Antioxidant Supplementation in the Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study data in 520 asymptomatic men and women. In a covariance analysis adjusting for common cardiovascular risk factors, low plasma levels of lycopene were associated with an 18% increase of IMT in men as compared with men in whom plasma levels were higher than median (P = 0.003 for difference). In women, the difference did not remain significant after the adjustments. On the basis of these works, it is evident that the circulating levels of lycopene play some role with regard to cardiovascular health in Finland, at least in men. We conclude that circulating levels of lycopene, a biomarker of tomato-rich food, may play a role in early stages of atherogenesis and may have clinical and public health relevance.
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Minna Karpansalo, Pirjo Manninen, Timo A Lakka, Jussi Kauhanen, Rainer Rauramaa, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Physical workload and risk of early retirement: prospective population-based study among middle-aged men.   J Occup Environ Med 44: 10. 930-939 Oct  
Abstract: Early retirement produces a heavy economic burden in many western societies. There is a need to identify single risk factors for early retirement and to find methods for preventing it. To estimate the effect of heavy physical work on early retiring, a cohort of 1755 men aged 42 to 65 years from eastern Finland was followed up from 1984 to 2000. Self-estimated physical workload was assessed at baseline. The inclusive pension records were obtained from national pension institutions. Logistic regression modeling was used to estimate the effect of physical workload and single physical risk factors on the risk of disability pension and nonillness-based pension. Risks were estimated for both disease-specific and all disability pensions. The interaction of physical fitness and physical workload and the resulting effects on risk were also estimated. During the follow-up, 861 (49.1%) men retired on a disability pension and 331 men (18.9%) retired on a nonillness-based early pension. Only 273 (15.6%) men reached the age for getting the normal old-age pension without having had any other early pension After adjustment for age, body mass index, alcohol consumption, smoking, maximal oxygen uptake, education and corresponding illness at baseline, heavy physical work was found to be associated with an increased risk of being retired on a disability pension due to musculoskeletal disorders (odds ratio (OR) 2.21, 95% confidence interval 1.36 to 3.61) but not due to cardiovascular or mental diseases. The association was stronger if cardiorespiratory fitness was poor. Lifting, static muscular loading and uncomfortable work positions increased the risk of early retirement especially due to musculoskeletal disorders. Loading of the upper extremity alone or with the neck and shoulder region seems to be an independent risk factor for early retirement. We concluded that physical workload increases the risk of retirement on a disability pension especially due to musculoskeletal disorders. In heavy physical work, the risk is increased especially among men with musculoskeletal or cardiovascular disease and poor cardiorespiratory fitness.
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H - M Lakka, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, G A Kaplan, T A Lakka (2002)  Obesity and weight gain are associated with increased incidence of hyperinsulinemia in non-diabetic men.   Horm Metab Res 34: 9. 492-498 Sep  
Abstract: We investigated the temporal relationships between obesity, weight change and hyperinsulinemia in a population-based 4-year follow-up study of 695 middle-aged, non-diabetic, and normoinsulinemic men. Thirty-eight men developed hyperinsulinemia during the follow-up (fasting serum insulin > or = 12.0 mU/l). In logistic regression analysis adjusting for other risk factors, men with body mass index of > or = 26.7 kg/m2 (highest third) had a 6.6-fold (p = 0.001) risk of developing hyperinsulinemia, compared with men with body mass index of < 24.4 kg/m2 (lowest third). Correspondingly, men with waist-to-hip ratio of > or = 0.95 (highest third) had a 3.5-fold (p = 0.028) incidence of hyperinsulinemia compared with men with waist-to-hip ratio of < 0.90 (lowest third). Weight gain in middle age and weight gain from the age of 20 years to middle age were also associated with increased risk of hyperinsulinemia. Hyperinsulinemia at baseline was not associated with weight gain during the follow-up. This prospective population-based study emphasizes the importance of avoiding obesity and weight gain during adulthood in preventing hyperinsulinemia.
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Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Clinical trials testing cardiovascular benefits of antioxidant supplementation.   Free Radic Res 36: 12. 1299-1306 Dec  
Abstract: Self-selected supplementation of vitamin E has been associated with reduced coronary events and atherosclerotic progression, but the evidence from clinical trials is controversial. ASAP was a 6-year randomized trial to study the effect of supplementation with vitamin E plus slow-release vitamin C on carotid atherosclerotic progression in 520 hypercholesterolemic men and women aged 45-69 years. The supplementation reduced the progression of carotid atherosclerosis by 26% (P = 0.014), by 33% (P = 0.024) in men and 14% (not significant) in women. The effect was larger in subjects with low baseline vitamin C or atherosclerotic plaques. In the Harvard IVUS trial, the combined supplementation with vitamins E and C significantly inhibited the progression of coronary atherosclerosis in one year. These data confirm that the supplementation with a combination of vitamins E and C can retard atherosclerotic progression. The findings of completed trials testing the effect on cardiovascular events are less consistent. The major on-going clinical trials include the SU.VI.MAX, WHS, WACS and WAVE studies. These involve in total over 80,000 subjects, who are treated with antioxidative supplements for years. The results of these studies will become available during 2003-2006. They may provide the necessary additional information concerning the effect of antioxidants on cardiovascular events.
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David E Laaksonen, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Leo K Niskanen, George A Kaplan, Jukka T Salonen, Timo A Lakka (2002)  Metabolic syndrome and development of diabetes mellitus: application and validation of recently suggested definitions of the metabolic syndrome in a prospective cohort study.   Am J Epidemiol 156: 11. 1070-1077 Dec  
Abstract: The World Health Organization (WHO) and the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) recently proposed definitions for the metabolic syndrome. Little is known of their validity, however. The authors assessed the sensitivity and specificity of the definitions of the metabolic syndrome for prevalent and incident diabetes mellitus in a Finnish population-based cohort of middle-aged men (n = 1,005) followed for 4 years since the late 1980s. Four definitions based on the WHO and NCEP recommendations were compared. All definitions identified persons at high risk for developing diabetes during the 4-year follow-up (odds ratios = 5.0-8.8). The WHO definition including waist-hip ratio > 0.90 or body mass index >or= 30 kg/m(2) was the most sensitive (0.83 and 0.67) and least specific (0.78 and 0.80) in detecting the 47 prevalent and 51 incident cases of diabetes. The NCEP definition in which adiposity was defined as waist girth > 102 cm detected only 61% of prevalent and 41% of incident diabetes, although it was the most specific (0.89 and 0.90). The WHO definition seems valid as judged by its relatively high sensitivity and specificity in predicting diabetes. The NCEP definition including waist > 102 cm also identifies persons at high risk for diabetes, but it is relatively insensitive in predicting diabetes.
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J Kaikkonen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, T P Tuomainen, K Nyyssönen, L Kosonen, U Ristonmaa, H M Lakka, R Salonen, H Korpela, J T Salonen (2002)  Exhaustive exercise increases plasma/serum total oxidation resistance in moderately trained men and women, whereas their VLDL + LDL lipoprotein fraction is more susceptible to oxidation.   Scand J Clin Lab Invest 62: 8. 599-607  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of exhaustive exercise (marathon run) on different lipid peroxidation measurements, including copper-induced serum lipids and VLDL + LDL oxidation susceptibility, and on plasma total antioxidative capacity (TRAP), muscular damage and plasma antioxidants in healthy moderately trained male (n = 21) and female (n = 25) volunteers. Blood samples were taken before and just after the 42-km run. In women, baseline levels of several antioxidative compounds (serum albumin and uric acid, plasma free thiols and blood glutathione) were lower, resulting in 21.5% lower plasma total antioxidative capacity and 70.3% higher serum oxidation susceptibility, compared to men. To compare effects in men and women, the exercise-induced variable changes were adjusted for their baseline levels. After this adjustment, there were no statistically significant differences between the genders in the extent of muscular damage (serum creatine kinase, (CK)), or in the change in serum lipids or VLDL + LDL oxidation susceptibility, or that of plasma antioxidative capacity. A possible beneficial effect of exercise was that serum HDL cholesterol levels increased significantly in both genders, but especially in women. In the group of pooled genders (n=46), the increases in serum CK and in plasma lactate were 190% (95% CI, 133% to 246%) and 109% (95% CI, 65% to 175%), respectively. On the basis of our lipid peroxidation and TRAP measurements, uric acid was observed to be the most important plasma antioxidant. The effect of exercise was to decrease the oxidation susceptibility of serum lipids by 24.8% (95% CI 13.4% to 36.2%) and to elevate plasma TRAP by 14.6% (95% CI, 11.4% to 17.7%). Nonetheless, the oxidation susceptibility of the VLDL + LDL fraction increased by 11.0% (95% CI, 1.9% to 20.2%). Our results suggest that there are no gender-based differences in exhaustive exercise-induced lipid peroxidation or muscular damage. Secondly, even though exhaustive exercise can increase plasma/serum total resistance towards oxidation, the oxidation resistance of the atherogenic lipoprotein fraction might be diminished. On the basis of these results, several in vitro measurements of lipid peroxidation assessing both water and lipid soluble plasma fractions are needed if a true perspective of the plasma redox status is to be obtained.
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Hanna-Maaria Lakka, David E Laaksonen, Timo A Lakka, Leo K Niskanen, Esko Kumpusalo, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  The metabolic syndrome and total and cardiovascular disease mortality in middle-aged men.   JAMA 288: 21. 2709-2716 Dec  
Abstract: CONTEXT: The metabolic syndrome, a concurrence of disturbed glucose and insulin metabolism, overweight and abdominal fat distribution, mild dyslipidemia, and hypertension, is associated with subsequent development of type 2 diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Despite its high prevalence, little is known of the prospective association of the metabolic syndrome with cardiovascular and overall mortality. OBJECTIVE: To assess the association of the metabolic syndrome with cardiovascular and overall mortality using recently proposed definitions and factor analysis. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: The Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a population-based, prospective cohort study of 1209 Finnish men aged 42 to 60 years at baseline (1984-1989) who were initially without CVD, cancer, or diabetes. Follow-up continued through December 1998. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Death due to coronary heart disease (CHD), CVD, and any cause among men with vs without the metabolic syndrome, using 4 definitions based on the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) and the World Health Organization (WHO). RESULTS: The prevalence of the metabolic syndrome ranged from 8.8% to 14.3%, depending on the definition. There were 109 deaths during the approximately 11.4-year follow-up, of which 46 and 27 were due to CVD and CHD, respectively. Men with the metabolic syndrome as defined by the NCEP were 2.9 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.2-7.2) to 4.2 (95% CI, 1.6-10.8) times more likely and, as defined by the WHO, 2.9 (95% CI, 1.2-6.8) to 3.3 (95% CI, 1.4-7.7) times more likely to die of CHD after adjustment for conventional cardiovascular risk factors. The metabolic syndrome as defined by the WHO was associated with 2.6 (95% CI, 1.4-5.1) to 3.0 (95% CI, 1.5-5.7) times higher CVD mortality and 1.9 (95% CI, 1.2-3.0) to 2.1 (95% CI, 1.3-3.3) times higher all-cause mortality. The NCEP definition less consistently predicted CVD and all-cause mortality. Factor analysis using 13 variables associated with metabolic or cardiovascular risk yielded a metabolic syndrome factor that explained 18% of total variance. Men with loadings on the metabolic factor in the highest quarter were 3.6 (95% CI, 1.7-7.9), 3.2 (95% CI, 1.7-5.8), and 2.3 (95% CI, 1.5-3.4) times more likely to die of CHD, CVD, and any cause, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality are increased in men with the metabolic syndrome, even in the absence of baseline CVD and diabetes. Early identification, treatment, and prevention of the metabolic syndrome present a major challenge for health care professionals facing an epidemic of overweight and sedentary lifestyle.
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M Vanharanta, J Mursu, T Nurmi, S Voutilainen, T H Rissanen, R Salonen, H Adlercreutz, J T Salonen (2002)  Phloem fortification in rye bread elevates serum enterolactone level.   Eur J Clin Nutr 56: 10. 952-957 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To analyse the lignan content of phloem powder enriched rye bread and to study the dose-response relationship of the effect of dietary plant lignans derived from phloem on intestinal production of enterolactone by measuring enterolactone concentration in serum. DESIGN: A randomized double-blind supplementation trial. SUBJECTS: Seventy-five non-smoking men recruited by newspaper advertisements. INTERVENTION: Subjects were randomized to three study groups receiving either rye bread high in phloem (HP, 14% of rye flour substituted with phloem powder), rye bread low in phloem (LP, 7% of rye flour substituted with phloem powder) or placebo rye bread. Participants consumed 70 g of study bread daily for 4 weeks and provided serum samples for enterolactone analysis at baseline and at the end of the intervention. RESULTS: There was a significant increase in serum enterolactone concentration in the LP and HP groups compared with the placebo group (P=0.009 and P=0.003, respectively). Considerable interindividual differences were observed in the response to dietary lignans within the study groups. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that plant lignans attached to insoluble fibre layer in phloem can be further metabolized and converted to enterolactone presumably by the bacteria present in the colon. Phloem powder is useful source of lignans for functional foods aimed to elevate serum enterolactone levels. SPONSORSHIP: Phloem powder and the study breads were provided by Finnpettu Oy and Linkosuo Oy, respectively. The clinical study work was sponsored in part by Oy Jurilab Ltd.
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PMID 
Corradina Alagona, Aino Soro, Kati Ylitalo, Riitta Salonen, Jukka T Salonen, Marja-Riitta Taskinen (2002)  A low high density lipoprotein (HDL) level is associated with carotid artery intima-media thickness in asymptomatic members of low HDL families.   Atherosclerosis 165: 2. 309-316 Dec  
Abstract: Low serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) is a strong predictor of coronary heart disease (CHD). The aim of the present study was to evaluate the metabolic parameters predicting the atherosclerotic changes in asymptomatic members of low HDL-C families. We performed carotid B-mode ultrasonography with intima-media thickness (IMT) measurement for 89 asymptomatic members of Finnish low HDL-C families. The family members were categorized as affected or unaffected according to the 10th age-gender specific HDL-C percentile. In the affected group, the most marked decrease of HDL subclasses was observed for HDL2-C when compared with the unaffected (109% difference). In the partial correlation analyses, age and gender showed significant correlations with the mean IMT (for age, r=0.880, P<0.001, and for gender, r=-0.361, P=0.018). Importantly, HDL-C and HDL2-C were significantly inversely related to the mean carotid IMT, also after correction for age (for HDL-C, r=-0.186, P=0.043, for HDL2-C, r=-0.208, P=0.029, when adjusted for age). The correlation for HDL-C was significant also when adjusted for gender. In conclusion, low HDL-C is associated with increased carotid artery IMT in asymptomatic members of low HDL-C families.
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PMID 
David E Laaksonen, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Jukka T Salonen, Leo K Niskanen, Rainer Rauramaa, Timo A Lakka (2002)  Low levels of leisure-time physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness predict development of the metabolic syndrome.   Diabetes Care 25: 9. 1612-1618 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the association of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and cardiorespiratory fitness with development of the metabolic syndrome, which predisposes diseases such as diabetes and atherosclerosis. We studied the associations of LTPA and cardiorespiratory fitness with development of the metabolic syndrome (World Health Organization [WHO] and the National Cholesterol Education Program [NCEP] definitions). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: LTPA over the previous 12 months, VO(2max) (ml. kg(-1). min(-1)), and cardiovascular and metabolic risk factors were assessed in a population-based cohort of 612 middle-aged men without the metabolic syndrome. RESULTS: At the 4-year follow-up, 107 men had metabolic syndrome (WHO definition). Men engaging in >3 h/week of moderate or vigorous LTPA were half as likely as sedentary men to have the metabolic syndrome after adjustment for major confounders (age, BMI, smoking, alcohol, and socioeconomic status) or potentially mediating factors (insulin, glucose, lipids, and blood pressure), especially in high-risk men. Vigorous LTPA had an even stronger inverse association, particularly in unfit men. Men in the upper third of VO(2max) were 75% less likely than unfit men to develop the metabolic syndrome, even after adjustment for major confounders. Adjustment for possible mediating factors attenuated the association. Associations of LTPA and VO(2max) with development of the metabolic syndrome, as defined by the NCEP, were qualitatively similar. CONCLUSIONS: In particular, high-risk men engaging in currently recommended levels of physical activity were less likely to develop the metabolic syndrome than sedentary men. Cardiorespiratory fitness was also strongly protective, although possibly not independent of mediating factors.
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PMID 
Birgitta Venho, Sari Voutilainen, Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Jyrki Virtanen, Timo A Lakka, Tiina H Rissanen, Marja-Leena Ovaskainen, Matti Laitinen, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Arginine intake, blood pressure, and the incidence of acute coronary events in men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Clin Nutr 76: 2. 359-364 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Evidence suggests that dietary supplementation of L-arginine, the precursor of nitric oxide, may protect arteries against atherosclerosis. OBJECTIVE: We tested the hypothesis that dietary arginine intake is associated with a decreased risk of acute coronary events in Finnish men aged 42-60 y. DESIGN: We investigated this association in a prospective cohort study of men who were free of prior coronary artery disease and who were examined in 1984-1989 in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). The dietary arginine intake of 1981 men was assessed by a 4-d food intake record during the baseline phase of the KIHD. RESULTS: Men in the highest quintile of dietary arginine intake (>or= 5691 mg/d) did not have a significantly lower risk of acute coronary events than did men in the 4 lower quintiles (relative risk after adjustment for potential coronary risk factors: 1.28; 95% CI: 0.85, 1.94). The covariates were age; examination years; body mass index; systolic blood pressure; serum total, HDL, and LDL cholesterol; serum triacylglycerols; urinary excretion of nicotine metabolites; maximal oxygen uptake in an exercise test; and alcohol intake. Splitting arginine intake into deciles or analyzing plant- and animal-derived arginine separately did not show any association between dietary arginine intake and the risk of acute coronary events. Arginine intake was also not consistently associated with blood pressure. CONCLUSION: Dietary arginine intake is not associated with the risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men in eastern Finland.
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PMID 
Veli-Pekka Valkonen, Mikko Kolehmainen, Hanna-Maaria Lakka, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Insulin resistance syndrome revisited: application of self-organizing maps.   Int J Epidemiol 31: 4. 864-871 Aug  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Most common chronic diseases have a multifaceted aetiological background. Because currently used statistical methods have severe limitations in describing complex non-linear processes, the authors evaluated the usefulness of a multivariate method which is able to describe non-linear phenomena, the self-organizing map (SOM). METHODS: The study subjects were the 1650 participants of the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). The SOM model was constructed using 25 continuous biochemical and physiological variables. The aim of the SOM algorithm, together with Sammon's mapping, is to group the data into reduced but representative format and divide the study population into homogeneous subgroups. RESULTS: The study population consisted of four groups (clusters) according to the method used. In the clusters C1 to C4 were 637, 445, 275 and 121 men, respectively. There were eight neurons (n = 172) which were not included to the four main clusters. The mean values of the variables related to insulin resistance syndrome in the identified SOM map were 32.1 (kg/m(2)) for body mass index (BMI), 1.01 for waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), 158.7 mmHg and 103.8 mmHg for systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP), 2.8 mmol/l for triglycerides, 6.2 mmol/l for blood glucose and 22.4 mU/l for serum insulin. There was a statistically significant difference in the mean values of BMI, WHR, SBP, DBP, HDL, triglycerides and blood glucose between the cluster representing the insulin resistance syndrome and the normal cluster. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that the multidimensional structures of insulin resistance syndrome can be visualized and identified at qualitative and quantitative level using the SOM algorithm.
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PMID 
Eeva S Leinonen, Jukka T Salonen, Riitta M Salonen, Riitta A Koistinen, Pekka J Leinonen, Seppo S Sarna, Marja-Riitta Taskinen (2002)  Reduced IGFBP-1 is associated with thickening of the carotid wall in type 2 diabetes.   Diabetes Care 25: 10. 1807-1812 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The aim of the present study was to assess the role of the insulin-like growth factor (IGF) system and lipids in predicting the carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) in type 2 diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A total of 239 type 2 diabetic participants in the Fenofibrate Intervention and Event Lowering in Diabetes (FIELD) Study (76 women) aged 50-75 years were examined before fenofibrate intervention. Patients underwent carotid ultrasonography for determination of IMT. IGF-I, IGF binding protein 1 (IGFBP-1), IGFBP-3, cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein B (apoB), lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)), glucose, HbA(1c), and C-peptide were measured in fasting samples. Patients were divided in groups without (n = 168) and with (n = 71) clinical cardiovascular disease (CVD). RESULTS: Partial correlations adjusted for age, sex, BMI, and diabetes duration showed an inverse association of IGFBP-1 with C-peptide (r = -0. 24, P = 0.018) and with maximal IMT (r = -0.42, P < 0.001), whereas IGF I and IGFBP-3 correlated positively with several risk-promoting lipid parameters. In linear regression analysis controlling for age, sex, BMI, diabetes duration, and presence or absence of oral antihyperglycemic or insulin medication, determinants of IMT were age, IGFBP-1, pulse pressure, Lp(a), diabetes duration, and insulin treatment. IGFBP-1 persisted in the model for subjects with CVD. CONCLUSIONS: In summary, a decrease in IGFBP-1 is a marker of carotid IMT thickening in patients with type 2 diabetes.
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PMID 
Regina Brigelius-Flohé, Frank J Kelly, Jukka T Salonen, Jiri Neuzil, Jean-Marc Zingg, Angelo Azzi (2002)  The European perspective on vitamin E: current knowledge and future research.   Am J Clin Nutr 76: 4. 703-716 Oct  
Abstract: Vitamin E is indispensible for reproduction in female rats. In humans, vitamin E deficiency primarily causes neurologic dysfunctions, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. Because of its antioxidative properties, vitamin E is believed to help prevent diseases associated with oxidative stress, such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, chronic inflammation, and neurologic disorders. However, recent clinical trials undertaken to prove this hypothesis failed to verify a consistent benefit. Given these findings, a group of European scientists met to analyze the most recent knowledge of vitamin E function and metabolism. An overview of their discussions is presented in this article, which includes considerations of the mechanisms of absorption, distribution, and metabolism of different forms of vitamin E, including the alpha-tocopherol transfer protein and alpha-tocopherol-associated proteins; the mechanism of tocopherol side-chain degradation and its putative interaction with drug metabolism; the usefulness of tocopherol metabolites as biomarkers; and the novel mechanisms of the antiatherosclerotic and anticarcinogenic properties of vitamin E, which involve modulation of cellular signaling, transcriptional regulation, and induction of apoptosis. Clinical trials were analyzed on the basis of the selection of subjects, the stage of disease, and the mode of intake, dosage, and chemical form of vitamin E. In addition, the scarce knowledge on the role of vitamin E in reproduction was summarized. In conclusion, the scientists agreed that the functions of vitamin E were underestimated if one considered only its antioxidative properties. Future research on this essential vitamin should focus on what makes it essential for humans, why the body apparently utilizes alpha-tocopherol preferentially, and what functions other forms of vitamin E have.
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PMID 
Maire Rantala, Marja-Leena Silaste, Anu Tuominen, Jari Kaikkonen, Jukka T Salonen, Georg Alfthan, Antti Aro, Y Antero Kesäniemi (2002)  Dietary modifications and gene polymorphisms alter serum paraoxonase activity in healthy women.   J Nutr 132: 10. 3012-3017 Oct  
Abstract: Paraoxonase-1 (PON1), a HDL-associated enzyme, may protect against the development of atherosclerosis. Serum PON1 activity and PON1-mediated capacity of HDL to prevent lipoprotein oxidation are modulated by two common polymorphisms at positions 192 (Gln-->Arg) and 55 (Leu-->Met) of the PON1 gene. We studied the effect of dietary modifications on PON1 activity and the role of PON1 gene polymorphisms in the response. A controlled, crossover dietary intervention of two 5-wk periods was conducted in 37 healthy, nonsmoking women. The two study diets were either low or high in vegetables, and thus in natural antioxidants, with some differences in fatty acid contents. The mean plasma total (-8%, P < 0.001), LDL (-7%, P < 0.01) and HDL (-7%, P < 0.001%) cholesterol, and apolipoprotein A-I (-8%, P < 0.001) concentrations were lower after the high vegetable diet period than after the low vegetable diet period. Also, the serum PON1 activity was lower (P < 0.05) after the high vegetable compared with the low vegetable diet period. The reduction of PON1 activity correlated with the reduction in HDL cholesterol (r = 0.35, P < 0.05). High baseline PON1 activity was related to the presence of the PON1(192Arg) allele (P < 0.001) and PON1(55Leu/Leu) genotype (P < 0.001). The reduction of PON1 activity due to the high vegetable diet was greatest among the women with the PON1(192Arg) allele (P < 0.05) and PON1(55Leu/Leu) genotype (P < 0.05). In conclusion, a diet high in vegetables, berries and fruit reduces PON1 activity, and the response is modulated by the genetic variance of PON1.
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PMID 
Jari A Laukkanen, Sudhir Kurl, Jukka T Salonen (2002)  Cardiorespiratory fitness and physical activity as risk predictors of future atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases.   Curr Atheroscler Rep 4: 6. 468-476 Nov  
Abstract: Physical fitness and activity status are well-documented risk predictors of cardiovascular and total mortality. The purpose of this article is to show how cardiorespiratory fitness predicts atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. Measurement of maximum oxygen consumption (VO(2max)), defined with or without ventilatory gas analysis during exercise testing, can provide a good estimate for cardiorespiratory fitness, which is an independent marker of the early disease. Low VO(2max) has been shown to be comparable with elevated systolic blood pressure, smoking, obesity, and diabetes in importance as a risk factor for mortality, as well as a predictor of coronary artery disease and the progression of atherosclerosis. Cardiorespiratory fitness represents one of the strongest predictors of mortality, emphasizing the importance of exercise testing in everyday clinical practice. In the future, well-defined, disease-specific training programs for exercise prescriptions in different risk groups are needed as a clinical tool.
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2001
 
PMID 
G A Kaplan, G Turrell, J W Lynch, S A Everson, E L Helkala, J T Salonen (2001)  Childhood socioeconomic position and cognitive function in adulthood.   Int J Epidemiol 30: 2. 256-263 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Risk of dementia and Alzheimer's disease is higher among adults with limited education, and the less educated perform poorer on cognitive function tests. This study determines whether the socioeconomic environment experienced during childhood has an impact on cognitive functioning in middle age. METHODS: A population-based study of eastern Finnish men (n = 496) aged 58 and 64 for whom there were data on parent's socioeconomic position (SEP), their own education level, and performance on neuropsychological tests. Cognitive function was measured using the Trail Making Test, the Selective Reminding Test, the Verbal Fluency Test, the Visual Reproduction Test, and the Mini Mental State Exam. RESULTS: We found a significant and graded association between parental SEP (combined as an index) and cognitive function both prior to and after adjustment for respondent's education. Those from more disadvantaged backgrounds exhibited the poorest performance. When the separate components of the parental SEP measure were used, father's occupation and mother's education were independently associated with the respondent's score for three and five of the tests, respectively (there was no association with father's education and mother's occupation). After adjustment for the respondent's education, father's occupation was no longer associated with respondent's test score, however, the results were essentially unchanged for mother's education. CONCLUSIONS: Higher SEP during childhood and greater educational attainment are both associated with cognitive function in adulthood, with mothers and fathers each contributing to their offspring's formative cognitive development and later life cognitive ability (albeit in different ways). Improvements in both parental socioeconomic circumstances and the educational attainment of their offspring could possibly enhance cognitive function and decrease risk of dementia later in life.
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PMID 
S Voutilainen, T H Rissanen, J Virtanen, T A Lakka, J T Salonen (2001)  Low dietary folate intake is associated with an excess incidence of acute coronary events: The Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Circulation 103: 22. 2674-2680 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Although several prospective studies have shown that low folate intake and low circulating folate are associated with increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), the findings are inconsistent. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied the associations of dietary intake of folate, vitamin B(6), and vitamin B(12) with the risk of acute coronary events in a prospective cohort study of 1980 Finnish men 42 to 60 years old examined in 1984 to 1989 in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Nutrient intakes were assessed by 4-day food record. During an average follow-up time of 10 years, 199 acute coronary events occurred. In a Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for 21 conventional and nutritional CHD risk factors, men in the highest fifth of folate intake had a relative risk of acute coronary events of 0.45 (95% CI 0.25 to 0.81, P=0.008) compared with men in the lowest fifth. This association was stronger in nonsmokers and light alcohol users than in smokers and alcohol users. A high dietary intake of vitamin B(6) had no significant association and that of vitamin B(12) a weak association with a reduced risk of acute coronary events. CONCLUSIONS: The present work in CHD-free middle-aged men is the first prospective cohort study to observe a significant inverse association between quantitatively assessed moderate-to-high folate intakes and incidence of acute coronary events in men. Our findings provide further support in favor of a role of folate in the promotion of good cardiovascular health.
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PMID 
S A Everson, J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, T A Lakka, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2001)  Stress-induced blood pressure reactivity and incident stroke in middle-aged men.   Stroke 32: 6. 1263-1270 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Exaggerated blood pressure reactivity to stress is associated with atherosclerosis and hypertension, which are known stroke risk factors, but its relation to stroke is unknown. Previous work also indicates that the association between reactivity and cardiovascular diseases may be influenced by socioeconomic status. METHODS: The impact of blood pressure reactivity and socioeconomic status on incident stroke was examined in 2303 men (mean age, 52.8+/-5.1 years) from a population-based, longitudinal study of risk factors for ischemic heart disease in eastern FINLAND: Reactivity was calculated as the difference between blood pressure measured during the anticipatory phase of an exercise tolerance test (before exercise) and resting blood pressure, measured 1 week earlier. Mean systolic reactivity was 20 mm Hg (+/-15.9), and mean diastolic reactivity was 8.6 mm Hg (+/-8.5). Socioeconomic status was assessed as years of education. One hundred thirteen incident strokes (90 ischemic) occurred in 11.2 (+/-1.6) years of follow-up. RESULTS: Men with exaggerated systolic reactivity (>/=20 mm Hg) had 72% greater risk of any stroke (relative hazard ratio [RH], 1.72; 95% CI, 1.17 to 2.54) and 87% greater risk of ischemic stroke (RH, 1.87; 95% CI, 1.20 to 2.89) relative to less reactive men. Moreover, men who were high reactors and poorly educated were nearly 3 times more likely to suffer a stroke than better educated, less reactive men (RH, 2.90; 95% CI, 1.66 to 5.08). Adjustment for stroke risk factors had little impact on these associations. Diastolic reactivity was unrelated to stroke risk. CONCLUSIONS: Excessive sympathetic reactivity to stress may be etiologically important in stroke, especially ischemic strokes, and low socioeconomic status confers added risk.
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PMID 
A Snapir, P Heinonen, T P Tuomainen, P Alhopuro, M K Karvonen, T A Lakka, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, J Kauhanen, V P Valkonen, U Pesonen, M Koulu, M Scheinin, J T Salonen (2001)  An insertion/deletion polymorphism in the alpha2B-adrenergic receptor gene is a novel genetic risk factor for acute coronary events.   J Am Coll Cardiol 37: 6. 1516-1522 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Our aim was to study whether an insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism in the alpha2B-adrenoceptor gene is associated with the risk for cardiovascular diseases. BACKGROUND: alpha2-adrenoceptors mediate contraction of vascular smooth muscle and induce coronary vasoconstriction in humans. The alpha2-adrenoceptor subtype B mediates vasoconstriction in mice. A variant of the human alpha2B-adrenoceptor gene that encodes a D of three residues in an intracellular acidic motif has been shown to confer decreased receptor desensitization. This receptor variant could, therefore, be involved in diseases associated with enhanced vasoconstriction. METHODS: This study was part of a prospective population-based study investigating risk factors for cardiovascular diseases in a cohort of middle-aged men from eastern Finland. Nine hundred twelve men aged 46 to 64 years were followed for an average time of 4.5 years. RESULTS: In this study population, 192 men (21%) had the D/D genotype; 256 (28%) had the I/I genotype, and 464 (51%) had a heterozygous genotype. In a Cox model adjusting for other coronary risk factors, men with the D/D genotype had 2.2 times (95% confidence interval: 1.1 to 4.4, p = 0.02) the risk to experience an acute coronary event (n = 15 for D/D, 10 for I/I and 12 for I/D) compared with men carrying either of the other two genotypes. The alpha2B-adrenoceptor genotype was not associated with hypertension in this study population. CONCLUSIONS: The D/D genotype of the alpha2B-adrenoceptor is a novel genetic risk factor for acute coronary events, but not for hypertension.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, H M Lakka, R Salonen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2001)  Abdominal obesity is associated with accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis in men.   Atherosclerosis 154: 2. 497-504 Feb  
Abstract: Abdominal obesity increases the risk of clinical atherosclerotic diseases, but whether it accelerates the progression of preclinical atherosclerosis is unknown. We studied whether waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) and waist circumference are associated with 4-year increase in indicators of common carotid atherosclerosis, assessed by B-mode ultrasonography, in 774 Finnish men aged 42-60 years without atherosclerotic diseases. Men with WHR of <0.91, 0.91-0.96 and >0.96 (thirds) had increase in maximal intima-media thickness (IMT) of 0.230, 0.255 and 0.281 mm/4 years (P=0.007 for linear trend; P=0.025 for difference) and plaque height of 0.241, 0.254 and 0.291 mm/4 years (P=0.005, P=0.013) adjusting for age, body mass index and technical covariates. Men with waist circumference of <85, 85-93 and >93 cm (thirds) had increase in maximal IMT of 0.227, 0.251 and 0.290 mm/4 years (P=0.011, P=0.035) and plaque height of 0.229, 0.263 and 0.296 mm/4 years (P=0.003, P=0.013). These associations were stronger in men with high (> or =3.8 mmol/l) than lower serum LDL cholesterol (P<0.05 for interaction). This is the first documentation that abdominal obesity is associated with accelerated progression of atherosclerosis, and supports the view that it is an important cardiovascular risk factor. This study emphasizes the role of avoiding abdominal obesity to prevent atherosclerotic diseases.
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PMID 
T H Rissanen, S Voutilainen, K Nyyssönen, T A Lakka, J Sivenius, R Salonen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2001)  Low serum lycopene concentration is associated with an excess incidence of acute coronary events and stroke: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Br J Nutr 85: 6. 749-754 Jun  
Abstract: A number of epidemiological studies have shown an association between beta-carotene and the risk of cardiovascular diseases, whereas only a few studies are available concerning the association of lycopene with the risk of coronary events, and no studies have been undertaken concerning lycopene and stroke. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that low serum levels of lycopene are associated with increased risk of acute coronary events and stroke in middle-aged men previously free of CHD and stroke. The subjects were 725 men aged 46-64 years examined in 1991-3 in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Forty-one men had either a fatal or a non-fatal acute coronary event or a stroke by December 1997. In a Cox' proportional hazard's model adjusting for examination years, age, systolic blood pressure and three nutritional factors (serum folate, beta-carotene and plasma vitamin C), men in the lowest quarter of serum lycopene levels (< or =0.07 micromol/l) had a 3.3-fold (95 % CI 1.7, 6.4, risk of acute coronary events or stroke compared with the others. Our study suggests that a low serum level of lycopene is associated with an increased risk of atherosclerotic vascular events in middle-aged men previously free of CHD and stroke.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, J A Laukkanen, R Rauramaa, R Salonen, H M Lakka, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2001)  Cardiorespiratory fitness and the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged men.   Ann Intern Med 134: 1. 12-20 Jan  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Good cardiorespiratory fitness has been associated with reduced risk for clinical events of atherosclerotic vascular diseases, but whether it is related to slower progression of early atherosclerosis is unclear. OBJECTIVE: To study the association between cardiorespiratory fitness and the progression of early carotid atherosclerosis. DESIGN: 4-year follow-up study. SETTING: Eastem Finland. PARTICIPANTS: Population-based sample of 854 men 42 to 60 years of age. MEASUREMENTS: Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max [mL/kg per minute]) was measured directly by using respiratory gas exchange in a cycle ergometer exercise test. Carotid atherosclerosis was assessed by using B-mode ultrasonography. RESULTS: After adjustments for age, technical covariates, and cigarette smoking, VO2max had strong, inverse, and graded associations with 4-year increases in maximal intima-media thickness (IMT) (standardized regression coefficient beta = -0.120; P = 0.002), plaque height (beta = -0.140; P < 0.001), surface roughness (beta = -0.147; P < 0.001), and mean IMT (beta = -0.080; P = 0.035). These associations weakened but remained statistically significant after additional adjustment for systolic blood pressure, serum levels of apolipoprotein B, diabetes, and plasma fibrinogen levels. The increases in maximal IMT, surface roughness, and mean IMT (23%, 31%, and 100%, respectively) were larger among men in the lowest quartile of VO2max (<26.1 mL/kg per minute) than among those in the highest quartile (>36.2 mL/kg per minute). CONCLUSIONS: Good cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with slower progression of early atherosclerosis in middle-aged men. These findings are important because they emphasize that middle-aged men can be evaluated for cardiorespiratory fitness to estimate their future risk for atherosclerotic vascular diseases. Additional research is warranted to investigate a possible causal relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness and atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
J A Laukkanen, T A Lakka, R Rauramaa, R Kuhanen, J M Venäläinen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (2001)  Cardiovascular fitness as a predictor of mortality in men.   Arch Intern Med 161: 6. 825-831 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the relations of cardiorespiratory fitness, as measured by maximal oxygen uptake and exercise test duration at the initiation of the study, with overall, cardiovascular disease (CVD)-related, and non-CVD-related mortality. METHODS: A population-based cohort study of 1294 men with no CVD, pulmonary disease, or cancer at baseline in Kuopio and surrounding communities in eastern Finland. During an average follow-up of 10.7 years, there were 124 overall, 42 CVD-related, and 82 non-CVD-related deaths. RESULTS: The relative risk of overall death in unfit men (maximal oxygen uptake <27.6 mL/kg per minute) was 2.76 (95% confidence interval, 1.43-5.33) (P =.002), and the relative risk of CVD-related death was 3.09 (95% confidence interval, 1.10-9.56) (P =.05), compared with fit men (maximal oxygen uptake >37.1 mL/kg per minute) after adjusting for age, examination years, smoking, and alcohol consumption. The relative risk of non-CVD-related death in unfit men was almost the same magnitude as for overall death. Furthermore, adjustment for serum lipid levels, blood pressure, plasma fibrinogen level, diabetes, and fasting serum insulin level did not weaken these associations significantly. Exercise test duration also had a strong inverse relation to overall, CVD-related, and non-CVD-related mortality. Poor cardiorespiratory fitness was comparable with elevated systolic blood pressure, smoking, obesity, and diabetes in importance as a risk factor for mortality. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiorespiratory fitness had a strong, graded, inverse association with overall, CVD-related, and non-CVD-related mortality. Maximal oxygen uptake and exercise test duration represent the strongest predictors of mortality.
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PMID 
S Kurl, J A Laukkanen, R Rauramaa, T A Lakka, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2001)  Systolic blood pressure response to exercise stress test and risk of stroke.   Stroke 32: 9. 2036-2041 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Systolic blood pressure (SBP) during exercise has been found to predict a future diagnosis of hypertension, coronary heart disease, and cardiovascular disease death. No studies have been conducted to show a relationship between SBP during exercise test and stroke. The aim of the present study was to study the associations between SBP rise, percent maximum SBP at 2 minutes after exercise, and the risk of stroke in a population-based sample of men with no prior coronary heart disease. METHODS: SBP was measured every 2 minutes during and after the exercise test. The subjects were a population-based sample of 1026 men without clinical coronary heart disease, antihypertensive medication, or prior stroke at baseline. During an average follow-up of 10.4 years, there were 46 cases of stroke (38 ischemic strokes). RESULTS: Men with SBP rise >19.7 mm Hg per minute of exercise duration had a 2.3-fold increased risk of any stroke and a 2.3-fold increased risk of ischemic stroke compared with men whose SBP rise was <16.1 mm Hg/min. Similarly, percent maximum SBP at 2 minutes after exercise (SBP at 2 minutes' recovery divided by maximum SBP) was associated (highest tertile) with a 4.6-fold increased risk of any stroke and a 5.2-fold increased risk of ischemic stroke. CONCLUSIONS: SBP rise during exercise and percent maximum SBP at 2 minutes after exercise were directly and independently associated with the risk of all stroke and ischemic stroke. Exercise SBP testing may be recommended as an additional tool in the prediction of future stroke.
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PMID 
E L Helkala, T Lakka, M Vanhanen, T P Tuomainen, C Ehnholm, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2001)  Associations between apolipoprotein E phenotype, glucose metabolism and cognitive function in men. An explorative study in a population sample.   Diabet Med 18: 12. 991-997 Dec  
Abstract: AIMS: To investigate the associations of the apolipoprotein E phenotype (apoE) and disturbed glucose metabolism with cognitive function in a random population sample. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted, in which 528 men aged 54 or 60 years were recruited randomly from a larger population-based sample of 1516 men. A subject was defined as having abnormal glucose tolerance (AGT), if he had a clinical diagnosis of diabetes, with either dietary or oral antidiabetic treatment or showed impaired glucose tolerance in an oral glucose tolerance test. The subjects were divided into three groups according to apolipoprotein E phenotypes: (a) E2/4, E3/4 or E4/4 (apoE E4); (b) E 3/3 (apoE E3); and (c) E2/2 or E2/3 (apoE E2). Memory function was examined using a word-list learning with Buschke's selective reminding method and test. Executive functions were assessed with the Trail Making Test A and B. RESULTS: Those subjects with apoE E2 and abnormal glucose metabolism demonstrated the worst cognitive executive control compared to other groups. Simple cognitive speed did not differ between the groups. CONCLUSIONS: The exploratory analyses revealed that subjects with apoE E2 allele and AGT had worse glycaemic control and cognitive executive control compared to other groups. Different apolipoprotein phenotypes together with impaired glucose tolerance may have different cumulative adverse effects on age-related cognitive performance. Some subgroups of subjects may be especially vulnerable to cognitive impairment.
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DOI   
PMID 
V P Valkonen, H Päivä, J T Salonen, T A Lakka, T Lehtimäki, J Laakso, R Laaksonen (2001)  Risk of acute coronary events and serum concentration of asymmetrical dimethylarginine.   Lancet 358: 9299. 2127-2128 Dec  
Abstract: Asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA) is an endogenous nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, which has been suggested to be a novel independent risk factor for endothelial dysfunction and coronary heart disease. We investigated the association of ADMA concentration in serum with risk of acute coronary events. We did a prospective, nested, case-control study in middle-aged men from eastern Finland. In an analysis of men who did not smoke, those who were in the highest quartile for ADMA (>0.62 micromol/L) had a 3.9-fold (95% CI 1.25-12.3, p=0.02) increase in risk of acute coronary events compared with the other quartiles. Our findings suggest that ADMA is a predictor of acute coronary events.
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PMID 
J Kaikkonen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J D Morrow, L J Roberts, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, T P Tuomainen, U Ristonmaa, H E Poulsen, J T Salonen (2001)  Supplementation with vitamin E but not with vitamin C lowers lipid peroxidation in vivo in mildly hypercholesterolemic men.   Free Radic Res 35: 6. 967-978 Dec  
Abstract: Although the use of vitamin E supplements has been associated with a reduction in coronary events, assumed to be due to lowered lipid peroxidation, there are no previous long-term clinical trials into the effects of vitamin C or E supplementation on lipid peroxidation in vivo. Here, we have studied the long-term effects of vitamins C and E on plasma F2-isoprostanes, a widely used marker of lipid peroxidation in vivo. As a study cohort, a subset of the "Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention" (ASAP) study was used. ASAP is a double-masked placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial to study the long-term effect of vitamin C (500 mg of slow release ascorbate daily), vitamin E (200 mg of D-alpha-tocopheryl acetate daily), both vitamins (CellaVie), or placebo on lipid peroxidation, atherosclerotic progression, blood pressure and myocardial infarction (n = 520 at baseline). Lipid peroxidation measurements were carried out in 100 consecutive men at entry and repeated at 12 months. The plasma F2-isoprostane concentration was lowered by 17.3% (95% CI 3.9-30.8%) in the vitamin E group (p = 0.006 for the change, as compared with the placebo group). On the contrary, vitamin C had no significant effect on plasma F2-isoprostanes as compared with the placebo group. There was also no interaction in the effect between these vitamins. In conclusion, long-term oral supplementation of clinically healthy, but hypercholesterolemic men, who have normal vitamin C and E levels with a reasonable dose of vitamin E lowers lipid peroxidation in vivo, but a relatively high dose of vitamin C does not. This observation may provide a mechanism for the observed ability of vitamin E supplements to prevent atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
A Snapir, P Heinonen, T P Tuomainen, T A Lakka, J Kauhanen, J T Salonen, M Scheinin (2001)  G-protein beta3 subunit C825T polymorphism: no association with risk for hypertension and obesity.   J Hypertens 19: 12. 2149-2155 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Several recent studies have indicated that a C825T polymorphism in the gene encoding the G-protein beta3 subunit is a significant risk factor for hypertension and obesity. In this study, we tested whether this polymorphism is associated with hypertension and obesity in white men. DESIGN: Population-based prospective cohort study. METHODS : We followed a cohort of 903 men, aged 42-61 years at baseline, for an average time of 4.2 years. Genotyping was performed by polymerase chain reaction. RESULTS: The genotype distribution was in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium: 514 (57%) had the CC genotype, 49 (5%) had the TT genotype and 340 (38%) were heterozygous (T:C = 0.24:0.76). There was no statistically significant difference between the genotype groups in respect to baseline and end of follow-up risk for hypertension or obesity, systolic or diastolic blood pressure, or body mass index. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the C825T polymorphism of the G-protein beta3 subunit gene does not notably contribute to the development of hypertension or obesity, and is not a significant determinant for blood pressure and body mass index in white men.
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PMID 
M K Karvonen, V P Valkonen, T A Lakka, R Salonen, M Koulu, U Pesonen, T P Tuomainen, J Kauhanen, K Nyyssönen, H M Lakka, M I Uusitupa, J T Salonen (2001)  Leucine7 to proline7 polymorphism in the preproneuropeptide Y is associated with the progression of carotid atherosclerosis, blood pressure and serum lipids in Finnish men.   Atherosclerosis 159: 1. 145-151 Nov  
Abstract: A rather common leucine7-to-proline7 (Leu7Pro) polymorphism in the preproneuropeptide Y (prepro-NPY) gene signal peptide may be important in blood pressure regulation, cholesterol metabolism and the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis in humans. We examined the associations of the Leu7Pro polymorphism with carotid atherosclerotic progression, blood pressure and serum lipids in a population-based sample of 966 men aged 42-60 years in Finland. The Pro7 substitution (carrier frequency 12.2%) was associated with accelerated four-year increase in the mean (P=0.01) and maximal (P=0.007) common carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and with slightly increased systolic (P=0.03) and diastolic (P=0.02) blood pressures, adjusted for other major risk factors. Men with Pro7 substitution had 30.6% (95% CI 6.9-54.0%) greater increase in the mean IMT and 20.0% (95% CI 5.3-34.4%) greater increase in the maximal IMT than men with Leu7/Leu7 genotype. The Pro7 substitution was also related to increased serum total cholesterol (P=0.01) and LDL cholesterol (P=0.02) in obese (body mass index (BMI)>30 kg/m(2)) men. This study provides important evidence suggesting that the Pro7 substitution in the prepro-NPY is an important risk factor for accelerated atherosclerotic progression, increased blood pressure and increased serum cholesterol in humans.
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PMID 
J A Laukkanen, S Kurl, T A Lakka, T P Tuomainen, R Rauramaa, R Salonen, J Eränen, J T Salonen (2001)  Exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia and coronary morbidity and mortality in middle-aged men.   J Am Coll Cardiol 38: 1. 72-79 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: We investigated the prognostic significance of exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia in both high and low risk men with no prior coronary heart disease (CHD). BACKGROUND: Silent ischemia predicts future coronary events in patients with CHD, but there is little evidence of its prognostic significance in subjects free of CHD. METHODS: We investigated the association of silent ischemia, as defined by ST depression during and after maximal symptom-limited exercise test, with coronary risk in a population-based sample of men with no prior CHD followed for 10 years on average. RESULTS: Silent ischemia during exercise was associated with a 5.9-fold (95% CI 2.3 to 11.8) CHD mortality in smokers, 3.8-fold (95% CI 1.9 to 7.9) in hypercholesterolemic men and 4.7-fold (95% CI 2.4 to 9.1) in hypertensive men adjusting for other risk factors. The respective relative risks (RRs) of any acute coronary event were 3.0 (95% CI 1.7 to 5.1), 1.9 (95% CI 1.2 to 3.1) and 2.2 (95% CI 1.4 to 3.5). These associations were weaker in men without these risk factors. Furthermore, silent ischemia after exercise was a stronger predictor for the risk of acute coronary events and CHD death in smokers and in hypercholesterolemic and hypertensive men than in men without risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Exercise-induced silent myocardial ischemia was a strong predictor of CHD in men with any conventional risk factor, emphasizing the importance of exercise testing to identify asymptomatic high risk men who could benefit from risk reduction and preventive measures.
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DOI   
PMID 
M O Laukkanen, P Leppänen, P Turunen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J T Salonen, S Ylä-Herttuala (2001)  Gene transfer of extracellular superoxide dismutase to atherosclerotic mice.   Antioxid Redox Signal 3: 3. 397-402 Jun  
Abstract: Clinical and epidemiological studies have provided circumstantial evidence that oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and antioxidants are involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Superoxide dismutases (SODs) have been shown in vitro to protect LDL from deleterious effects of superoxide anions. In the present study, we have used adenoviral gene transfer to determine effect of extracellular SOD (EC-SOD) on atherogenesis in LDL receptor -/- mice. Intravenous administration of EC-SOD adenovirus (2 x 10(9) plaque forming units) into tail vein targeted transgene mainly to liver and induced a 3.5- to sevenfold increase in plasma total SOD activity. EC-SOD was secreted into circulation for 2-3 weeks mostly in a truncated B-form, suggesting that endogenous proteolytic mechanisms control the level and distribution of the enzyme. Therapeutic potential was determined by measuring plasma resistance against copper oxidation and analyzing atherosclerotic lesion areas in aortas of LDL receptor -/- mice. Mice were kept on a cholesterol diet for 10 weeks before gene transfer and 3 or 6 weeks after the gene transfer. Results showed a tendency for a reduction in the overall lesion area after EC-SOD gene transfer as compared with LacZ transduced control mice, but the difference did not reach statistical significance. It is concluded that short-term overexpression of EC-SOD in vivo does not affect atherogenesis in LDL receptor -/- mice.
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2000
 
PMID 
J Kauhanen, M K Karvonen, U Pesonen, M Koulu, T P Tuomainen, M I Uusitupa, J T Salonen (2000)  Neuropeptide Y polymorphism and alcohol consumption in middle-aged men.   Am J Med Genet 93: 2. 117-121 Jul  
Abstract: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) plays an important role in the hypothalamic regulation of food intake and energy balance. According to recent findings in animals, NPY also seems to be a potent regulator of alcohol consumption. We used the recently identified Leu(7) to Pro(7) polymorphism in the signal peptide part of NPY to investigate whether the NPY system is associated with alcohol consumption in humans. The subjects (N = 889) were an ethnically homogeneous, nonselected population sample of middle-aged men from Eastern Finland. The gene variant producing Pro(7) substitution was associated with a 34% higher average alcohol consumption, even after adjustment for a number of covariates (P = 0.03). The proportion of heavy drinkers (over 230 g of ethanol/week) was also somewhat higher in this group (13.1% vs. 8.2%, P = 0.10). Our study provides the first evidence that alcohol preference in humans is likely to be regulated by the NPY system.
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PMID 
T Hallikainen, H Lachman, T Saito, J Volavka, J Kauhanen, J T Salonen, O P Ryynänen, M Koulu, M K Karvonen, T Pohjalainen, E Syvälahti, J Hietala, J Tiihonen (2000)  Lack of association between the functional variant of the catechol-o-methyltransferase (COMT) gene and early-onset alcoholism associated with severe antisocial behavior.   Am J Med Genet 96: 3. 348-352 Jun  
Abstract: Addictive drugs, including ethanol, increase the brain's dopaminergic transmission, and catechol-o-methyltransferase (COMT) enzyme has a crucial role in dopamine inactivation. A common functional polymorphism in the COMT gene results in a three- to four-fold variation in enzyme activity. In a previous study, we found an association between type 1 (with late-onset but without prominent antisocial behavior) alcoholism and the low activity allele of the COMT gene. In this work we analyzed whether the COMT polymorphism has any effect on the development of type 2 (with early-onset and habitual impulsive violent behavior) alcoholism. The COMT genotype was determined in 62 impulsive violent recidivist offenders with early-onset (type 2) alcoholism, 123 late-onset nonviolent (type 1) alcoholics, and 267 race and gender-matched controls. The allele and genotype frequencies of these groups were compared with each other and also with previously published data from 3,140 Finnish blood donors. The type 2 alcoholics did not differ from either the blood donors or the controls. The low activity (L) allele frequency was higher among type 1 alcoholics (chi(2) = 4.98, P = 0.026) when compared with type 2 cases. The odds ratio for type 1 alcoholism as compared with type 2 alcoholism for those subjects with the LL genotype versus the HH genotype was 3.0 (95% confidence interval 1.1-8.4, P = 0.017). The results suggest that COMT genotype has no major role in the development of early-onset alcoholism with severe antisocial behavior.
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PMID 
N Krause, J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (2000)  Standing at work and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Scand J Work Environ Health 26: 3. 227-236 Jun  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The association between the amount of standing at work and the progression of carotid intima media thickness (IMT) was studied among 584 active working men participating in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. METHODS: Ultrasound measurements of atherosclerotic changes in the carotid arteries were performed at the beginning of the study and after 4 years. Analyses of changes in IMT included adjustments for risk factors and stratification by base-line levels of atherosclerosis and prevalent ischemic heart disease (IHD). RESULTS: Significant relationships were found between the amount of standing at work and atherosclerotic progression. After adjustment for the heaviness of the work, psychosocial job factors, income, and biological and behavioral risk factors, the mean change in maximum IMT for those standing not at all, a little, a lot, and very much was 0.24, 0.25, 0.28, and 0.33 mm, respectively. For men with IHD the respective changes were 0.08, 0.15, 0.37, and 0.75 mm -- a 9-fold difference between the no-exposure and high-exposure group. For the men with carotid stenosis, the respective difference was 3-fold. CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide the first empirical support in a population study for the role of hemodynamic factors in the progression of atherosclerosis induced by long-term standing. Men with carotid stenosis or IHD appear especially vulnerable to the adverse effects associated with standing at work. Reducing the duration of standing at work should be considered both in the occupational rehabilitation of such patients and in the primary prevention of atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
S A Everson, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, J T Salonen (2000)  Hypertension incidence is predicted by high levels of hopelessness in Finnish men.   Hypertension 35: 2. 561-567 Feb  
Abstract: Recent studies have reported that hopelessness is an important factor in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, including ischemic heart disease, acute myocardial infarction, and atherosclerotic progression. This study examined the relationship between hopelessness and incident hypertension in a population-based sample of 616 initially normotensive, middle-aged men from eastern Finland, an area with high rates of cardiovascular disease. Participants completed a medical examination and a series of psychological questionnaires at baseline and at the 4-year follow-up. Hopelessness was measured by 2 items assessing negative expectancy about the future and one's goals. A logistic regression model with adjustments for age, body mass index, baseline resting blood pressure, physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, education, parental history of hypertension, and self-reported depressive symptoms revealed that men reporting high levels of hopelessness at baseline were 3 times more likely to become hypertensive (systolic blood pressure > or =165 mm Hg and/or a diastolic blood pressure > or =95 mm Hg or confirmed use of antihypertensive medication) in the intervening 4 years than men who were not hopeless (odds ratio, 3.22; 95% confidence interval, 1. 56, 6.67). Men reporting moderate levels of hopelessness were not at a significantly increased risk of hypertension (odds ratio, 1.27; 95% confidence interval, 0.79, 2.07). This is the first study to identify a significant relationship between hopelessness and incident hypertension. Research is needed to explore the neuroendocrine and central nervous system mechanisms underlying this association.
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PMID 
K Seppänen, M Kantola, R Laatikainen, K Nyyssönen, V P Valkonen, V Kaarlöpp, J T Salonen (2000)  Effect of supplementation with organic selenium on mercury status as measured by mercury in pubic hair.   J Trace Elem Med Biol 14: 2. 84-87 Jun  
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effect of four months of yeast-based selenium supplementation on selenium and mercury status in subjects with low serum selenium. The study was carried out in Rakvere, Estonia. Pubic hair mercury, serum selenium and blood selenium concentrations in 23 subjects (serum selenium < 90 micrograms/l) were investigated before and after selenium supplementation. Thirteen subjects were randomized into the selenium supplementation group and ten into the placebo group. The selenium supplementation group received daily 100 micrograms of selenomethionine. Selenium supplementation reduced pubic hair mercury level by 34% (p = 0.005) and elevated serum selenium by 73% and blood selenium by 59% in the supplemented group (p < 0.001 for both). The study indicates that mercury accumulation in pubic hair can be reduced by dietary supplementation with small daily amounts of organic selenium in a short range of time.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Seppänen, T A Lakka, R Salonen, G A Kaplan (2000)  Mercury accumulation and accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis: a population-based prospective 4-year follow-up study in men in eastern Finland.   Atherosclerosis 148: 2. 265-273 Feb  
Abstract: Basic research and our previous studies have suggested that mercury exposure enhances lipid peroxidation and the risk of myocardial infarction, but there are no studies concerning the association between mercury accumulation and atherosclerosis. We therefore investigated whether high hair mercury content is associated with accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis, determined by ultrasonographic assessment of common carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), in a prospective study among 1014 men aged 42-60 years. In a linear regression model adjusting for other atherosclerotic risk factors, high hair mercury content was one of the strongest predictors of the 4-year increase in the mean IMT (P2.81 microg/g (fifths) had an IMT increase of 0.105, 0.102, 0.113, 0.107 and 0.140 mm/4 years, respectively (P=0.041 for heterogeneity between groups). The IMT increase was 0.034 mm/4 years (31.9%) greater in the highest fifth than in the other fifths (P<0.05 for the difference). These findings suggest that mercury accumulation in the human body is associated with accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, T Hallikainen, T P Tuomainen, M Koulu, M K Karvonen, J T Salonen, J Tiihonen (2000)  Association between the functional polymorphism of catechol-O-methyltransferase gene and alcohol consumption among social drinkers.   Alcohol Clin Exp Res 24: 2. 135-139 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: A common functional genetic polymorphism in the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene (Val158 Met) results in 3- to 4-fold differences in COMT enzyme activity and dopamine inactivation rate. Previous studies have shown that type I alcoholism is more common among subjects with low activity COMT genotype (LL), compared with high activity (HH) or heterozygotic (LH) genotypes. METHODS: We studied alcohol consumption and the COMT genotype in middle-aged Finnish men (n 896), who represented an unselected ethnically homogenous population sample and reported using alcohol during the past year. Average alcohol use in pure ethanol (grams per week) was compared between subjects with LL genotype and subjects with LH or HH genotypes. RESULTS: Men with LL genotype (30% of all subjects) reported 27% higher weekly alcohol consumption compared with the two other genotype groups (p < 0.05). The difference remained statistically significant after a multivariate adjustment for sociodemographic factors and prior or existing diseases (p = 0.031). CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that COMT polymorphism may contribute significantly to alcohol intake not only in alcoholics but also in a general male population.
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PMID 
H M Lakka, T A Lakka, J Tuomilehto, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (2000)  Hyperinsulinemia and the risk of cardiovascular death and acute coronary and cerebrovascular events in men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Arch Intern Med 160: 8. 1160-1168 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The role of hyperinsulinemia as a cardiovascular risk factor is controversial. We studied whether hyperinsulinemia is independently associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. METHODS: Fasting serum insulin level and other cardiovascular risk factors were determined in 1521 men in eastern Finland aged 42 to 60 years with neither cardiovascular disease nor diabetes at baseline. Forty-five cardiovascular deaths, 110 acute coronary events, 48 strokes, and 163 any cardiovascular events occurred during an average follow-up of 9.5 years. A total of 163 cardiovascular events (45 cardiovascular deaths, 110 acute coronary events, and 48 strokes) occurred during an average follow-up of 9.5 years. RESULTS: In Cox regression analysis adjusting for age and examination years, fasting serum insulin level as a continuous variable was directly associated with the risk of cardiovascular death (P = .006), acute coronary events (P = .04), and stroke (P = .02). Men with insulin levels of 52 to 66 pmol/L, 67 to 89 pmol/L, and 90 pmol/L or more (3 highest quartiles) had 1.4-fold (95% confidence interval, 0.5-3.7), 1.4-fold (95% confidence interval, 0.5-3.7), and 2.5-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.0-5.9; P = .05) cardiovascular mortality, respectively, compared with men with insulin levels of less than 52 pmol/L (lowest quartile) (P = .04 for linear trend). Adjustment for serum lipid levels, blood pressure, and obesity reduced the excess cardiovascular mortality in the highest insulin quartile by 7%, 33%, and 67%, respectively. There were no statistically significant differences in the incidence of acute coronary events and stroke between the insulin quartiles. CONCLUSIONS: Hyperinsulinemia had a modest association with increased cardiovascular mortality in middle-aged men. This relationship was largely explained by obesity, hypertension, and dyslipidemia. Hyperinsulinemia had even weaker associations with the risk of acute coronary event and stroke.
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PMID 
S Voutilainen, T A Lakka, E Porkkala-Sarataho, T Rissanen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2000)  Low serum folate concentrations are associated with an excess incidence of acute coronary events: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Eur J Clin Nutr 54: 5. 424-428 May  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that low serum folate concentrations are associated with an increased risk of acute coronary events in men free of prior coronary heart disease. SETTING: Research Institute of Public Health, University of Kuopio, Kuopio, Finland. DESIGN: Prospective study in a cohort of 734 men aged 46-64 y examined in 1991-1993 as part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) and followed for 5 y and 3 months. INTERVENTION: Acute coronary events during the follow-up period were obtained by national hospital discharge registry. Baseline serum folate concentrations were measured by radioimmunoassay. RESULTS: During the follow-up, six (2.5%) men with higher serum folate concentrations (highest third>11.3 nmol/1) and 28 (5.7%) men with lower serum folate (two lowest thirds) developed an acute coronary event (P=0.008). In a Cox model adjusting for age, examination years, and plasma lycopene concentration, in men with higher serum folate concentrations the relative risk for an acute coronary event was 0.31 (95% CI 0.11-0.90, P=0.031) when compared with men with lower serum folates. CONCLUSION: This prospective cohort study in middle-aged men from eastern Finland indicates that moderate-to-high levels of serum folate are associated with a greatly reduced incidence of acute coronary events.
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PMID 
T Rissanen, S Voutilainen, K Nyyssönen, T A Lakka, J T Salonen (2000)  Fish oil-derived fatty acids, docosahexaenoic acid and docosapentaenoic acid, and the risk of acute coronary events: the Kuopio ischaemic heart disease risk factor study.   Circulation 102: 22. 2677-2679 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous findings concerning the serum levels of fish-derived (n-3) fatty acids and coronary heart disease are inconsistent. The purpose of this study was to investigate the association between the serum n-3 end-product fatty acids docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), docosapentaenoic acid (DPA), and eicosapentaenoic acid and the risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied this association in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a prospective population study in Eastern Finland. Subjects were randomly selected and included 1871 men aged 42 to 60 years who had no clinical coronary heart disease at baseline examination. A total of 194 men had a fatal or nonfatal acute coronary event during follow-up. In a Cox proportional hazards' model adjusting for other risk factors, men in the highest fifth of the proportion of serum DHA+DPA in all fatty acids had a 44% reduced risk (P=0.014) of acute coronary events compared with men in the lowest fifth. Men in the highest fifth of DHA+DPA who had a low hair content of mercury (</=2.0 microgram/g) had a 67% reduced risk (P=0.016) of acute coronary events compared with men in the lowest fifth who had a high hair content of mercury (>2.0 microgram/g). There was no association between proportion of eicosapentaenoic acid and the risk of acute coronary events. CONCLUSIONS: Our data provide further confirmation for the concept that fish oil-derived fatty acids reduce the risk of acute coronary events. However, a high mercury content in fish could attenuate this protective effect.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, H M Lakka, J Kaikkonen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, S Voutilainen, T A Lakka, T Rissanen, L Leskinen, T P Tuomainen, V P Valkonen, U Ristonmaa, H E Poulsen (2000)  Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study: a randomized trial of the effect of vitamins E and C on 3-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   J Intern Med 248: 5. 377-386 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: To study the efficacy of vitamin E and C supplementation on the progression of carotid atherosclerosis, hypothesizing an enhanced preventive effect in men and in smokers and synergism between vitamins. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS: Double-masked two-by-two factorial trial, randomization in four strata (by gender and smoking status) to receive twice daily either 91 mg (136 IU) of d-alpha-tocopherol, 250 mg of slow-release vitamin C, a combination of these or placebo for three years. A randomized sample of 520 smoking and nonsmoking men and postmenopausal women aged 45-69 years with serum cholesterol >/= 5.0 mmol L-1 were studied. SETTING: The population of the city of Kuopio in Eastern Finland. INTERVENTION: Twice daily either a special formulation of 91 mg of d-alpha-tocopherol, 250 mg of slow-release vitamin C, a combination of these (CellaVie(R)) or placebo for three years. MEASUREMENTS: Atherosclerotic progression, defined as the linear regression slope of ultrasonographically assessed common carotid artery mean intima-media thickness (IMT), was calculated over semi-annual assessments. RESULTS: The average increase of the mean IMT was 0.020 mm year-1 amongst men randomized to placebo and 0.018 mm year-1 in vitamin E, 0.017 mm year-1 in vitamin C and 0.011 mm year-1 in the vitamin combination group (P = 0.008 for E + C vs. placebo). The respective means in women were 0.016, 0.015, 0.017 and 0.016 mm year-1. The proportion of men with progression was reduced by 74% (95% CI 36-89%, P = 0.003) by supplementation with the formulation containing both vitamins, as compared with placebo. CONCLUSIONS: Our study shows that a combined supplementation with reasonable doses of both vitamin E and slow-release vitamin C can retard the progression of common carotid atherosclerosis in men. This may imply benefits with regard to other atherosclerosis-based events.
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PMID 
J T Salonen (2000)  Markers of oxidative damage and antioxidant protection: assessment of LDL oxidation.   Free Radic Res 33 Suppl: S41-S46 Nov  
Abstract: Low density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation in vivo is likely to contribute to the development and progression of atherosclerosis and other chronic degenerative diseases such as cancers. LDL oxidation in the human body can be assessed by measuring LDL oxidation products, such as hydroxy-fatty acids and oxysterols or indirect indicators of lipid peroxidation, e.g. F2-isoprostanes. A second approach is to measure the immunologic response to antigenic lipid peroxidation products. In vitro measurements such as the susceptibility of isolated lipoprotein to oxidants are less preferable.
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PMID 
H M Lakka, L Oksanen, T P Tuomainen, K Kontula, J T Salonen (2000)  The common pentanucleotide polymorphism of the 3'-untranslated region of the leptin receptor gene is associated with serum insulin levels and the risk of type 2 diabetes in non-diabetic men: a prospective case-control study.   J Intern Med 248: 1. 77-83 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The purpose of the study was to test whether the pentanucleotide insertion/deletion polymorphism in the 3'-untranslated region (3'-UTR) of the leptin receptor gene, which has previously been associated with serum insulin levels in obese subjects, is associated with insulin levels and the risk of type 2 diabetes in non-diabetic middle-aged men. SUBJECTS AND DESIGN: We studied these associations in a prospective population-based nested case-control study in 41 men who developed type 2 diabetes during 4-year follow-up and 81 controls who were matched for age, obesity, baseline glucose and insulin and other strongest risk factors. Both the cases and the controls came from a cohort of 985 men who had no diabetes at baseline. RESULTS: There was one homozygote and 22 heterozygotes for the 3'-UTR insertion allele amongst all 122 men. The carrier frequency of this allele was 9.8% amongst the cases and 23.5% amongst the controls. At baseline, the mean fasting serum insulin was 12.2 mU L-1 in the 23 men who were heterozygous or homozygous for the insertion allele and 17.1 mU L-1 in the 99 men who were homozygous for the deletion allele (P = 0.005). In a logistic regression model adjusting for four strongest non-matched predictors of type 2 diabetes, the carriers of the insertion allele had a 79% reduced risk of diabetes (OR = 0.21; 95% CI = 0.06-0.77, P = 0.019), compared with non-carriers. CONCLUSION: Our findings support the hypothesis that alterations in the leptin signalling system could contribute to serum insulin levels and the development of type 2 diabetes.
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DOI   
PMID 
G Siest, P Bertrand, B Qin, B Herbeth, J M Serot, L Masana, J Ribalta, A P Passmore, A Evans, M Ferrari, M Franceschi, J Shepherd, M Cuchel, U Beisiegel, K Zuchowsky, A S Rukavina, J Sertic, M Stojanov, V Kostic, A Mitrevski, V Petrova, C Sass, A Merched, J T Salonen, L Tiret, S Visvikis (2000)  Apolipoprotein E polymorphism and serum concentration in Alzheimer's disease in nine European centres: the ApoEurope study. ApoEurope group.   Clin Chem Lab Med 38: 8. 721-730 Aug  
Abstract: As part of the ApoEurope Project, apolipoprotein E (apo E) common polymorphism and serum concentration were determined in 489 Alzheimer's disease patients and 429 controls. Patients and controls were recruited through nine centres in eight European countries. Age, sex ratios and education levels of both case and control populations were similar, although discrete differences appeared between centres. The prevalence of the epsilon4 allele was higher in Alzheimer's disease than in controls (increased by 140%), while serum apo E concentration was lower by 11.2% (p<0.001). In addition, serum total cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations were lower in Alzheimer's disease (p<0.001), while that of apo Al was not affected. The decrease in serum apo E concentration was not accounted for by the epsilon4 allele, age or gender, suggesting that apo E concentration might represent an additional risk factor for Alzheimer's disease, complementary and independent of the epsilon4 allele. Further analysis will be aimed at determining whether the quantitative link between apo E concentration and Alzheimer's disease occurs through the effect of apo E genotype on lipid parameters or by other mechanisms.
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PMID 
T Rissanen, S Voutilainen, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (2000)  Low plasma lycopene concentration is associated with increased intima-media thickness of the carotid artery wall.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 20: 12. 2677-2681 Dec  
Abstract: Although a number of epidemiological studies have evaluated the association between ss-carotene and the risk of cardiovascular diseases, there has been little research on the role of lycopene, an acyclic form of ss-carotene, with regard to the risk of cardiovascular disease. We investigated the relationship between plasma concentrations of lycopene and intima-media thickness of the common carotid artery wall (CCA-IMT) in 520 middle-aged men and women (aged 45 to 69 years) in eastern Finland. They were examined from 1994 to 1995 at the baseline of the Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study, a randomized trial concerning the effect of vitamin E and C supplementation on atherosclerotic progression. The subjects were classified into 2 categories according to the median concentration of plasma lycopene (0.12 micromol/L in men and 0.15 micromol/L in women). Mean CCA-IMT of the right and left common carotid arteries was 1.18 mm in men and 0.95 mm in women with plasma lycopene levels lower than the median and 0.97 mm in men (P:<0.001 for difference) and 0.89 mm in women (P:=0.027 for difference) with higher levels of plasma lycopene. In ANCOVA adjusting for cardiovascular risk factors and intake of nutrients, in men, low levels of plasma lycopene were associated with a 17.8% increment in CCA-IMT (P:=0.003 for difference). In women, the difference did not remain significant after the adjustments. We conclude that low plasma lycopene concentrations are associated with early atherosclerosis, manifested as increased CCA-IMT, in middle-aged men living in eastern Finland.
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PMID 
T W Kamarck, J Eränen, J R Jennings, S B Manuck, S A Everson, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (2000)  Anticipatory blood pressure responses to exercise are associated with left ventricular mass in Finnish men: Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Circulation 102: 12. 1394-1399 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity to psychological demands may contribute to the development of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy. We examined the cross-sectional association between anticipatory blood pressure (BP) responses to bicycle exercise and LV mass in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a population-based epidemiological sample. METHODS AND RESULTS: Among 876 men from 4 age cohorts (ages 42, 48, 58, and 64 years), we collected echocardiographic assessments of LV mass along with measures of BP response taken before bicycle ergometry testing. Anticipatory BP responses were positively associated with LV mass, with significant associations only among younger (age <50 years) subjects with elevated resting pressures (3-way interactions for anticipatory BP x age x resting pressure for systolic and diastolic BP, all P:<0.05; for younger subjects with elevated systolic BP, P:<0. 01; and for younger subjects with elevated diastolic BP, P:<0.001). Among these subgroups, exaggerated anticipatory BP responses (top quartile) were associated with an incremental increase in LV mass of 10% or greater, corrected for body surface area. Results remained significant after adjusting for age, education, salt consumption, and resting BP, and the pattern of findings was maintained among men with no previous history of cardiovascular disease. CONCLUSIONS: The tendency to show exaggerated pressor responses to psychological demands may be a significant independent correlate of LV mass, especially among young men with high resting pressures. This is the first study to examine such associations in a middle-aged population sample.
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Porkkala-Sarataho, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, J Kaikkonen, R Salonen, U Ristonmaa, U Diczfalusy, R Brigelius-Flohe, S Loft, H E Poulsen (2000)  Long-term effects of vitamin E, vitamin C, and combined supplementation on urinary 7-hydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine, serum cholesterol oxidation products, and oxidation resistance of lipids in nondepleted men.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 20: 9. 2087-2093 Sep  
Abstract: We studied the long-term effects of vitamins E and C and their combination on lipid peroxidation in vivo and in vitro. The Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) trial is a double-masked placebo-controlled randomized clinical trial to study the effects of vitamin C (500 mg of slow release ascorbate per day), vitamin E (182 mg of RRR-alpha-tocopherol acetate per day), and the combination of both antioxidants. Lipid peroxidation measurements were carried out for 48 male participants at entry and at 12 and 36 months. Compared with placebo, vitamin E and the vitamin combination increased plasma lipid-standardized alpha-tocopherol during the first 12 months by 68.2% and 65.2% (P:<0. 001 for both), respectively, and reduced serum 7beta-hydroxycholesterol by 50.4% (P:=0.013) and 44.0% (P:=0.041), respectively. The net change of lipid standardized alpha-tocopherol was 63.8% after 36 months of vitamin E supplementation and 43.3% for the combination. Vitamin C supplementation elevated plasma total ascorbate level by 30.1% (P:=0.043) in 12 months and by 91.1% (P:=0. 001) in 36 months. Neither vitamin E, vitamin C, nor the combination influenced the urinary excretion rate of 7-hydro-8-oxo-2'-deoxyguanosine or the antioxidative capacity of plasma. Vitamin E and the combination of vitamins E and C enhanced the oxidation resistance of isolated lipoproteins and total serum lipids. Our data indicate that long-term supplementation of nondepleted men with a reasonable dose of vitamin E alone or in combination with slow release vitamin C reduces lipid peroxidation in vitro and in vivo, whereas a relatively high dose of vitamin C alone does not.
Notes:
 
PMID 
S Voutilainen, T A Lakka, P Hämelahti, T Lehtimäki, H E Poulsen, J T Salonen (2000)  Plasma total homocysteine concentration and the risk of acute coronary events: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   J Intern Med 248: 3. 217-222 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Results from prospective studies concerning the association between plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) concentration and coronary heart disease (CHD) are conflicting. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that plasma tHcy is associated with an increased risk of acute coronary events in middle-aged men. DESIGN AND SUBJECTS: We investigated this association in a prospective nested case-control study among Eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years. Plasma tHcy measurements were carried out for 163 men who had an acute coronary event during an average 8 years and 11 months follow-up of the whole cohort and for 163 control subjects. Both the cases and the controls were from a cohort of 2005 men who had no clinical CHD at the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease (KIHD) baseline. RESULTS: Men in the highest plasma tHcy concentration quarter had no increase in the risk of coronary events compared with men with lower tHcy concentrations (odds ratio = 0.88, 95% confidence interval 0.44-1.76). Average follow-up time before the first coronary event was 4.9 years (SD 3.2) in men in the highest plasma tHcy quarter and 5.5 years (SD 3.1) in men in the three lowest quarters (P = 0.368). CONCLUSION: We conclude that plasma tHcy is not associated with an increased risk of coronary events in the middle-aged male population in eastern Finland.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Kaikkonen, K Nyyssönen, A Tomasi, A Iannone, T P Tuomainen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J T Salonen (2000)  Antioxidative efficacy of parallel and combined supplementation with coenzyme Q10 and d-alpha-tocopherol in mildly hypercholesterolemic subjects: a randomized placebo-controlled clinical study.   Free Radic Res 33: 3. 329-340 Sep  
Abstract: It has been claimed that coenzyme Q10 (Q10) would be an effective plasma antioxidant since it can regenerate plasma vitamin E. To test separate effects and interaction between Q10 and vitamin E in the change of plasma concentrations and in the antioxidative efficiency, we carried out a double-masked, double-blind clinical trial in 40 subjects with mild hypercholesterolemia undergoing statin treatment. Subjects were randomly allocated to parallel groups to receive either Q10 (200 mg daily), d-alpha-tocopherol (700 mg daily), both antioxidants or placebo for 3 months. In addition we investigated the pharmacokinetics of Q10 in a separate one-week substudy. In the group that received both antioxidants, the increase in plasma Q10 concentration was attenuated. Only vitamin E supplementation increased significantly the oxidation resistance of isolated LDL. Simultaneous Q10 supplementation did not increase this antioxidative effect of vitamin E. Q10 supplementation increased and vitamin E decreased significantly the proportion of ubiquinol of total Q10, an indication of plasma redox status in vivo. The supplementations used did not affect the redox status of plasma ascorbic acid. In conclusion, only vitamin E has antioxidative efficiency at high radical flux ex vivo. Attenuation of the proportion of plasma ubiquinol of total Q10 in the vitamin E group may represent in vivo evidence of the Q10-based regeneration of the tocopheryl radicals. In addition, Q10 might attenuate plasma lipid peroxidation in vivo, since there was an increased proportion of plasma ubiquinol of total Q10.
Notes:
1999
 
PMID 
J Tiihonen, T Hallikainen, H Lachman, T Saito, J Volavka, J Kauhanen, J T Salonen, O P Ryynänen, M Koulu, M K Karvonen, T Pohjalainen, E Syvälahti, J Hietala (1999)  Association between the functional variant of the catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) gene and type 1 alcoholism.   Mol Psychiatry 4: 3. 286-289 May  
Abstract: Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) is an enzyme which has a crucial role in the metabolism of dopamine. It has been suggested that a common functional genetic polymorphism in the COMT gene, which results in 3 to 4-fold difference in COMT enzyme activity, may contribute to the etiology of mental disorders such as bipolar disorder and alcoholism. Since ethanol-induced euphoria is associated with the rapid release of dopamine in limbic areas, it is conceivable that subjects who inherit the allele encoding the low activity COMT variant would have a relatively low dopamine inactivation rate, and therefore would be more vulnerable to the development of ethanol dependence. The aim of this study was to test this hypothesis among type 1 (late-onset) alcoholics. The COMT polymorphism was determined in two independent male late onset (type 1) alcoholic populations in Turku (n = 67) and Kuopio (n = 56). The high (H) and low (L) activity COMT genotype and allele frequencies were compared with previously published data from 3140 Finnish blood donors (general population) and 267 race- and gender-matched controls. The frequency of low activity allele (L) was markedly higher among the patients both in Turku (P = 0.023) and in Kuopio (P = 0.005) when compared with the general population. When all patients were compared with the general population (blood donors), the difference was even more significant (P = 0.0004). When genotypes of all alcoholics (n = 123) were compared with genotypes of matched controls, the odds ratio (OR) for alcoholism for those subjects having the LL genotype vs those with HH genotype was 2.51, 95% CI 1.22-5.19, P = 0.006. Also, L allele frequency was significantly higher among alcoholics when compared with controls (P = 0.009). The estimate for population etiological (attributable) fraction for the LL genotype in alcoholism was 13.3% (95% CI 2.3-25.7%). The results indicate that the COMT polymorphism contributes significantly to the development of late-onset alcoholism.
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PMID 
S Voutilainen, J D Morrow, L J Roberts, G Alfthan, H Alho, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1999)  Enhanced in vivo lipid peroxidation at elevated plasma total homocysteine levels.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 19: 5. 1263-1266 May  
Abstract: An elevated plasma total homocysteine level (tHcy) is considered an independent risk factor for atherosclerosis. The mechanisms by which hyperhomocysteinemia induces atherosclerosis are only partially understood, but promotion of LDL oxidation and endothelial injury have been suggested. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that a high plasma tHcy is associated in men with increased in vivo lipid peroxidation, as measured by plasma F2-isoprostane concentrations. We investigated this association in a subset of the participants in the Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study. Of 256 male participants, a subsample of 100 consecutive men was selected for F2-isoprostane assays. The mean tHcy was 11.0 micromol/L, and the mean F2-isoprostanes was 29.6 ng/L. The simple correlation coefficient for association between tHcy and F2-isoprostane was 0.40 (P<0.001). In a linear regression model, the variables with the strongest associations with F2-isoprostane were tHcy (standardized coefficient 0.33, P<0.001), serum triglycerides (0.21, P=0.042), carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (0.15, P=0.132), and plasma lipid-standardized alpha-tocopherol (-0.11, P=0.252) (R2=0.24, P<0. 001 for model). Plasma F2-isoprostane levels increased linearly across quintiles of tHcy (P<0.001). The unadjusted mean (95% confidence interval) F2-isoprostanes was 47.5% greater in the highest tHcy quintile (37.4, 31.1 to 43.6 ng/L) than in the lowest quintile (25.3, 21.3 to 29.3 ng/L). Adjustment for the strongest other determinants of F2-isoprostane reduced this difference to 28. 2% (P=0.010). Our present data suggest that elevated fasting plasma tHcy is associated with enhanced in vivo lipid peroxidation in men.
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PMID 
J Kaikkonen, K Nyyssönen, T P Tuomainen, U Ristonmaa, J T Salonen (1999)  Determinants of plasma coenzyme Q10 in humans.   FEBS Lett 443: 2. 163-166 Jan  
Abstract: In the present study, we assessed the strongest determinants of plasma coenzyme Q10 (Qm10) in 518 men and women (aged 45-70 years) with a stepwise multivariate regression model. Male gender (P<0.001), serum cholesterol (P<0.001), serum gamma-glutamyltransferase (P<0.001), serum triglycerides (P< 0.001), age (P=0.017) and 4-day alcohol consumption (P=0.03) were the most important factors which were directly associated with plasma Q10). The intensity of conditioning exercise (P=0.03) and use of statins (P<0.05) showed an inverse association with plasma Q10. None of the assessed nutrients increased plasma Q10 levels significantly. Our results suggest that many confounding factors, in addition to serum cholesterol and triglycerides, should be taken into account when the role of plasma Q10 is examined in epidemiological research.
Notes:
 
PMID 
T A Lakka, R Salonen, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1999)  Blood pressure and the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged men.   Hypertension 34: 1. 51-56 Jul  
Abstract: Elevated blood pressure has consistently been associated with increased prevalence of preclinical atherosclerosis and with increased risk of clinical atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, there is no prospective evidence of the association between blood pressure and the progression of preclinical atherosclerosis. We therefore investigated the relationships of systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and pulse pressure to the 4-year increase in the measures of early carotid atherosclerosis, the mean and maximal common carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), assessed by B-mode ultrasonography, in 1026 men aged 42 to 60 years. Men with the SBP of <120, 120 to 126, 127 to 134, 135 to 143, and >143 mm Hg (fifths) had an increase in the mean IMT of 0.074, 0.090, 0.110, 0.136, and 0.158 mm per 4 years (P<0.001 for difference between groups, P<0.001 for linear trend) and in the maximal IMT of 0.212, 0.221, 0.279, 0.286, and 0.315 mm per 4 years, (P<0.001, P<0.001), respectively, adjusting for other atherosclerotic risk factors, including DBP. Also, pulse pressure, when adjusted for other risk factors including mean arterial pressure, was directly associated with the IMT increase. DBP was not independently related to the IMT increase. This is the first documentation to show that mildly elevated SBP and pulse pressure accelerate the progression of preclinical atherosclerosis. This study provides further evidence for the finding that systolic hypertension is a more important risk factor for atherosclerosis and consequent CVD than diastolic hypertension. Therefore, more attention should be paid to the level of SBP in the evaluation of CVD risk and in the treatment of hypertension.
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PMID 
S A Everson, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, T A Lakka, J Sivenius, J T Salonen (1999)  Anger expression and incident stroke: prospective evidence from the Kuopio ischemic heart disease study.   Stroke 30: 3. 523-528 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: High levels of anger are associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease and hypertension, but little is known about the role of anger in stroke risk. METHODS: Anger expression style and risk of incident stroke were examined in 2074 men (mean age, 53.0+/-5.2 years) from a population-based, longitudinal study of risk factors for ischemic heart disease and related outcomes in eastern Finland. Self-reported style of anger expression was assessed by questionnaire at baseline. Linkage to the FINMONICA stroke and national hospital discharge registers identified 64 first strokes (50 ischemic) through 1996. Average follow-up time was 8.3+/-0.9 (mean+/-SD) years. RESULTS: Men who reported the highest level of expressed anger were at twice the risk of stroke (relative hazard, 2.03; 95% CI, 1.05 to 3.94) of men who reported the lowest level of anger, after adjustments for age, resting blood pressure, smoking, alcohol consumption, body mass index, low-density and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, fibrinogen, socioeconomic status, history of diabetes, and use of antihypertensive medications. Additional analysis showed that these associations were evident only in men with a history of ischemic heart disease (n=481), among whom high levels of outwardly expressed anger (high anger-out) predicted >6-fold increased risk of stroke after risk factor adjustment (relative hazard, 6.87; 95% CI, 1.50 to 31.4). Suppressed anger (anger-in) and controlled anger (anger-control) were not consistently related to stroke risk. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first population-based study to show a significant relationship between high levels of expressed anger and incident stroke. Additional research is necessary to explore the mechanisms that underlie this association.
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PMID 
T P Tuomainen, K Kontula, K Nyyssönen, T A Lakka, T Heliö, J T Salonen (1999)  Increased risk of acute myocardial infarction in carriers of the hemochromatosis gene Cys282Tyr mutation : a prospective cohort study in men in eastern Finland.   Circulation 100: 12. 1274-1279 Sep  
Abstract: Background-Homozygosity for a relatively common Cys282Tyr mutation of the human hemochromatosis-associated (HFE) gene was recently found to account for most cases of hereditary hemochromatosis. Because excess iron has been postulated to enhance risk of vascular disease, we studied whether occurrence of this mutation was associated with increased risk of first acute myocardial infarction in healthy middle-aged men in a prospective cohort study. Methods and Results-Study subjects were the 1150 participants in the population-based Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD), aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years at baseline, who had no coronary heart disease at baseline and for whom a DNA sample was available. Information about myocardial infarctions was collected prospectively by use of FINMONICA (FINnish MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease study) and hospital data. Events were classified by MONICA (MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease study) diagnostic criteria. The HFE Cys282Tyr mutation was assayed by a solid-phase minisequencing technique. One subject was homozygous and 76 individuals were heterozygous for the HFE Cys282Tyr mutation (6.7%). During a mean follow-up of 9 years, 8 (10.4%) of 77 carriers and 60 (5.6%) of 1073 noncarriers experienced an acute myocardial infarction. In a Cox proportional hazards model allowing for the other strongest risk factors, the carriers had a 2.3-fold (95% CI 1. 1 to 4.8; P=0.03) risk of acute myocardial infarction compared with noncarriers. Conclusions-Male carriers of the common hemochromatosis gene mutation are at 2-fold risk for first acute myocardial infarction compared with noncarriers.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Kaikkonen, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1999)  Measurement and stability of plasma reduced, oxidized and total coenzyme Q10 in humans.   Scand J Clin Lab Invest 59: 6. 457-466 Oct  
Abstract: There are findings indicating that a decreased ratio of plasma coenzyme Q10 (Q10) to LDL cholesterol could be associated with an increased risk of atherosclerosis. Furthermore, the proportion of plasma Q10H2 (reduced Q10, ubiquinol) of total Q10 has been shown to be attenuated in major diseases, such as hyperlipidemia and coronary artery disease. These observations suggest that measurement of plasma total Q10 and the proportion of plasma Q10H2 of total Q10 would be of clinical significance. However, epidemiological studies addressing this issue require large numbers of subjects, and measurements from unfrozen samples are unfeasible. For this reason, we evaluated the stability of Q10 samples during sample storage and processing. We also compared solid phase and hexane pre-treatments prior to high-performance liquid chromatographic determination of Q10. Our results indicate that samples for plasma total Q10 measurement can be pre-treated in normal laboratory lighting conditions, thawed and frozen several times, and stored deep frozen for a couple of years without changes in measured Q10 values. If purification of the samples by silica and C18 is needed, the best reproducibility tends to be achieved with powder treatment (not with cartridges). However, to measure successfully the proportion of plasma ubiquinol of total Q10, samples must be thawed, extracted, and analysed one at a time and quickly to ensure minimal ubiquinol oxidation during the measurement process.
Notes:
 
DOI   
PMID 
M Vanharanta, S Voutilainen, T A Lakka, M van der Lee, H Adlercreutz, J T Salonen (1999)  Risk of acute coronary events according to serum concentrations of enterolactone: a prospective population-based case-control study.   Lancet 354: 9196. 2112-2115 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The lignan enterolactone, produced by the intestinal microflora from dietary precursors, has been implicated in protection against cancer. We investigated the association of serum enterolactone concentration with the risk of acute coronary events in a prospective nested case-control study in middle-aged men from eastern Finland. METHODS: Enterolactone was measured by time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay in serum from 167 men who had an average 7.7 years of follow-up to an acute coronary event and from 167 control men. Both cases and controls were from a cohort of 2005 men who had no clinical coronary heart disease (CHD) at baseline. The controls were matched for age, examination year, and residence. Acute coronary events were registered prospectively. FINDINGS: The mean baseline serum enterolactone concentration was lower among the cases than the controls (18.2 [SD 21.1] vs 23.5 [18.2] nmol/L, p=0.001). The men in the highest quarter of the enterolactone distribution (>30.1 nmol/L) had a 58.8% (95% CI 24.1-77.6, p=0.005) lower risk of acute coronary events than men in the lowest quarter. After adjustment for the nine most strongly predictive risk factors, men in the highest enterolactone quarter had a 65.3% (11.9-86.3, p=0.03) lower risk than men in the lowest quarter. INTERPRETATION: Healthy men with high serum concentrations of enterolactone had a lower risk of acute coronary events than men with lower concentrations. These findings support the hypothesis that plant-dominated fibre-rich food lowers the risk of CHD.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1999)  Pattern of alcohol drinking and progression of atherosclerosis.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 19: 12. 3001-3006 Dec  
Abstract: Most studies that examine the role of alcohol consumption in atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease have overlooked the possible effect of drinking pattern. We investigated the association between the habit of heavy acute intake of beer and spirits (binging) and the 4-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a population-based sample of middle-aged Finnish men. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) were used to estimate changes in maximum and mean intima-media thickness (IMT) and the maximum plaque height in 764 KIHD participants who reported using beer and in 871 participants who used spirits. After adjustment for age, baseline carotid atherosclerosis, and average weekly alcohol consumption level, we observed the highest atherosclerosis progression in men who usually consumed a whole bottle of vodka or more in 1 session. For beer binging (>6 beers at a time), the magnitude of IMT progression was even higher, although this association was only marginally significant (P<0.1) because of smaller numbers. The associations were largely unaffected by adjustments for blood pressure, lipids, smoking, BMI, and medication. The magnitude of the difference was generally higher in a subgroup that was free of IHD at baseline. We conclude that the pattern of drinking associates with the progression of carotid atherosclerosis independently of the total level of alcohol consumption and risk factors.
Notes:
1998
 
PMID 
S Voutilainen, G Alfthan, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1998)  Association between elevated plasma total homocysteine and increased common carotid artery wall thickness.   Ann Med 30: 3. 300-306 Jun  
Abstract: Homocysteine is increasingly recognized as a risk factor for atherothrombotic arterial diseases. We investigated the relation between plasma concentrations of total homocysteine (tHcy) and common carotid artery intima-media wall thickness, measured by B-mode ultrasonography, in 513 asymptomatic men and women from eastern Finland aged 45-69 years. The subjects were examined in 1994-95 at the baseline of the Antioxidant Supplementation in Atherosclerosis Prevention (ASAP) study, a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled two by two factorial trial on the effect of vitamin E and C supplementation in the prevention of atherosclerotic progression. The subjects were assigned into two categories according to the plasma tHcy concentration; concentration over 11.5 micromol/L (highest quartile) or concentration below 11.5 micromol/L. In this study population the mean plasma tHcy concentration was 10.0 micromol/L, and the prevalence of plasma tHcy concentration exceeding 11.5 micromol/L was 33% in men and 18% in women. The adjusted mean intima-media thickness of the right and left common carotid arteries was 1.12 mm in men with elevated plasma tHcy concentration and 1.02 mm in men with a plasma tHcy concentration below 11.5 micromol/L (P = 0.029). In women there was no significant difference. We conclude that elevated plasma tHcy concentrations are associated with early atherosclerosis, as manifested by increased common carotid artery intima-media wall thickness, in middle-aged eastern Finnish men.
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PMID 
T P Tuomainen, K Punnonen, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1998)  Association between body iron stores and the risk of acute myocardial infarction in men.   Circulation 97: 15. 1461-1466 Apr  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Epidemiological evidence concerning the role of iron, a lipid peroxidation catalyst, in coronary heart disease (CHD) is inconsistent. We investigated the association of the concentration ratio of serum transferrin receptor to serum ferritin (TfR/ferritin), a state-of-the-art measurement of body iron stores, with the risk of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in a prospective nested case-control study in men from eastern Finland. METHODS AND RESULTS: Transferrin receptor assays were carried out for 99 men who had an AMI during an average 6.4 years of follow-up and 98 control men. Both the cases and the controls were nested from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) cohort of 1931 men who had no clinical CHD at the baseline study. The controls were matched for age, examination year, and residence. AMIs were registered prospectively. Soluble transferrin receptors were measured by immunoenzymometric assay and ferritin concentration by radioimmunoassay from frozen baseline serum samples. The mean TfR/ferritin ratio was 15.1 (SE, 2.0) among cases and 21.3 (SE, 2.2) among controls (P=.035 for difference). In logistic regression models adjusting for other strongest risk factors for AMI and indicators of inflammation and alcohol intake, men in the lowest and second lowest thirds of the TfR/ferritin ratio had a 2.9-fold (95% CI, 1.3 to 6.6, P=.011) and 2.0-fold (0.9 to 4.2, P=.081) risk of AMI compared with men in the highest third (P=.010 for trend). CONCLUSIONS: These data show an association between increased body iron stores and excess risk of AMI, confirming previous epidemiological findings.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, T A Lakka, H M Lakka, V P Valkonen, S A Everson, G A Kaplan (1998)  Hyperinsulinemia is associated with the incidence of hypertension and dyslipidemia in middle-aged men.   Diabetes 47: 2. 270-275 Feb  
Abstract: Insulin resistance or compensatory hyperinsulinemia has been associated with hypertension and dyslipidemia in cross-sectional studies. In contrast, evidence from prospective population-based studies, which could establish the time order of the relationship, is sparse and inconsistent. Therefore, we investigated the associations of hyperinsulinemia with the incidence of hypertension and dyslipidemia in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a population-based 4-year follow-up study of middle-aged men from eastern Finland. Out of 975 men who had no diabetes, 543 had resting systolic blood pressure (sBP) of < 165 mmHg and resting diastolic blood pressure (dBP) of < 95 mmHg at baseline and were not taking antihypertensive medication, and 764 had serum triglycerides of < 2.3 mmol/l and HDL cholesterol of > or =1.0 mmol/l at baseline. In logistic regression models adjusted for age, baseline resting blood pressure, baseline lipids, obesity, weight change, and other risk factors, men with hyperinsulinemia (fasting insulin in the highest quintile, > or =12.0 mU/l) at baseline had a 2.0-fold (95% CI 1.1-3.5, P = 0.025) incidence of hypertension (sBP of > or =165 or dBP of > or =95 mmHg), a 2.1-fold (95% CI 1.3-3.4, P = 0.002) incidence of dyslipidemia (serum HDL cholesterol of < 1.0 mmol/l or serum triglycerides of > or =2.3 mmol/l), and a 2.6-fold (95% CI 1.1-6.3, P = 0.028) incidence of the combination of these disorders in 4 years, compared with normoinsulinemic men. These findings demonstrate the role of hyperinsulinemia in incident hypertension and dyslipidemia and suggest that both hypertension and dyslipidemia are associated with insulin metabolism disturbance, independently of obesity and body weight.
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PMID 
H Priemé, K Nyyssönen, K Grønbaek, M Klarlund, S Loft, P Tønnesen, J T Salonen, H E Poulsen (1998)  Randomized controlled smoking cessation study: transient increase in plasma high density lipoprotein but no change in lipoprotein oxidation resistance.   Scand J Clin Lab Invest 58: 1. 11-18 Feb  
Abstract: Low plasma levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) and high levels of low density lipoprotein (LDL) as well as smoking are known risk factors in coronary heart disease. It has been suggested that oxidative modification renders LDL atherogenic. We investigated the influence of smoking cessation on plasma lipid and lipoprotein levels and on the ability of lipoproteins to resist oxidation in vitro (lag time). A total of 182 healthy smokers who smoked more than 15 cigarettes per day were randomized to stop smoking (smoking cessation group, n = 100) or to continue smoking for 4 weeks (control group, n = 82). The smoking cessation group was followed up after 26 weeks. After 4 weeks, the HDL level had increased from mean +/- SD 1.36 +/- 0.34 to 1.48 +/- 0.40 mmol l-1 (p < 0.001) in 62 successful quitters, while levels were unchanged in the control group (72 subjects in per-protocol analysis). However, after 26 weeks there was no change in HDL (1.34 +/- 0.36 vs. 1.36 +/- 0.35 mmol l-1) in 29 subjects from the smoking cessation group who fulfilled the study. Plasma levels of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), LDL, total cholesterol, triglycerides and oxidation resistance of VLDL + LDL did not show significant changes any time during the study for either group. Thus, plasma levels of lipids and lipoproteins as well as oxidation resistance of lipoproteins seem unaffected by smoking cessation for 26 weeks.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, Q Qiao, R Salonen, A Nissinen, J T Salonen (1998)  Ultrasonographic manifestations of carotid atherosclerosis and glucose intolerance in elderly eastern Finnish men.   Diabetes Care 21: 8. 1349-1352 Aug  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To study the association of ultrasonographic manifestations of common carotid atherosclerosis with glucose intolerance in survivors of the cohort of men born in 1900-1919 in eastern Finland. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Carotid ultrasonography was carried out for 182 men in 1989. Glucose tolerance status classified based on an oral glucose tolerance test in 1984 and 1989 surveys was used in both prospective and cross-sectional analyses. RESULTS: Carotid atherosclerosis was common in men aged 70-89 years. There was no significant difference in the maximal carotid intimal-medial thickness between diabetic and nondiabetic men and over different age-groups; it was 1.28, 1.33, and 1.36 mm in subjects with diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance, and normal glucose tolerance, respectively (P = 0.69). No association between the presence of a nonmineralized or a mineralized atherosclerotic lesion with diabetes was found. Fasting plasma insulin did not relate to ultrasonographically detectable atherosclerotic lesions. CONCLUSIONS: Hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia may not be main contributors to atherosclerosis in elderly men, partly because smoking is less common and total and LDL cholesterol concentrations are lower in diabetic men than in men with normal glucose tolerance.
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PMID 
J W Lynch, S A Everson, G A Kaplan, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1998)  Does low socioeconomic status potentiate the effects of heightened cardiovascular responses to stress on the progression of carotid atherosclerosis?   Am J Public Health 88: 3. 389-394 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study examined whether heightened cardiovascular reactivity and low socioeconomic status had synergistic effects on the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a population of eastern Finnish men. METHODS: Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were used to measure 4-year progression of intima-media thickness in 882 men according to cardiovascular reactivity and socioeconomic status. Associations were examined in relation to risk factors and were stratified by baseline levels of atherosclerosis and prevalent ischemic heart disease. RESULTS: The effect of reactivity on atherosclerotic progression depended on socioeconomic status. Men who had heightened cardiovascular responsiveness to stress and were born into poor families, received little education, or had low incomes had the greatest atherosclerotic progression. CONCLUSIONS: An understanding of associations between individual risk factors and disease should be based on etiologic hypotheses that are conceived at the population level and involve fundamental social and economic causes of disease. This study demonstrates how examining the interaction of an individual biological predisposition will low socioeconomic status over the life course is etiologically informative for understanding the progression of atherosclerotic vascular disease.
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PMID 
E K Porkkala-Sarataho, M K Nyyssönen, J E Kaikkonen, H E Poulsen, E M Hayn, R M Salonen, J T Salonen (1998)  A randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled trial of the effects of 200 mg alpha-tocopherol on the oxidation resistance of atherogenic lipoproteins.   Am J Clin Nutr 68: 5. 1034-1041 Nov  
Abstract: Supplementation with high doses of alpha-tocopherol has increased the oxidation resistance of LDL in many clinical trials. There have been only a few placebo-controlled trials in healthy persons of alpha-tocopherol doses usually contained in dietary supplements. We carried out a single-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial to examine the effect of 200 mg RRR-alpha-tocopheryl acetate/d on the oxidation resistance of atherogenic lipoproteins (VLDL+LDL including intermediate-density lipoproteins) in 40 smoking men. VLDL+LDL oxidation resistance was assessed as conjugated dienes after copper induction and hemin degradation after hydrogen peroxide induction. Also, the LDL total peroxyl-radical trapping antioxidant parameter (LDL TRAP) and plasma malondialdehyde were measured at baseline and after 2 mo of supplementation. Plasma RRR-alpha-tocopherol concentrations were measured at 2-h intervals for 12 h at baseline and after 2 mo of supplementation. Compared with placebo, 200-mg RRR-alpha-tocopheryl acetate supplementation elevated plasma and VLDL+LDL alpha-tocopherol concentrations, LDL TRAP, and oxidation resistance of VLDL+LDL. Plasma alpha-tocopherol increased by 88% (P < 0.0001), VLDL+LDL alpha-tocopherol increased by 90% (P < 0.0001), and LDL TRAP by 58% (P < 0.0001). The time to the start of oxidation (lag time) was prolonged by 34% when assessed with a copper-induced method and by 109% when assessed with a hemin + hydrogen peroxide-induced method; the time to maximal oxidation was prolonged by 21% (copper-induced method) in the vitamin E-supplemented group. Changes in plasma alpha-tocopherol, lipid-standardized alpha-tocopherol, and VLDL+LDL alpha-tocopherol correlated significantly with changes in LDL TRAP, lag time, and time to maximal oxidation. Differences in changes between groups in the area under the curve for plasma alpha-tocopherol were significant (P < 0.009). Our results suggest that 200 mg oral RRR-alpha-tocopheryl acetate/d had a clear effect on the in vitro oxidation of VLDL+LDL in smoking men.
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PMID 
S A Everson, D E Goldberg, G A Kaplan, J Julkunen, J T Salonen (1998)  Anger expression and incident hypertension.   Psychosom Med 60: 6. 730-735 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: It has long been thought that anger is important in the development of essential hypertension. However, tests of this hypothesis have yielded conflicting findings. This study prospectively examined the relationship between anger expression style and incident hypertension in a population sample of middle-aged men. METHODS: Participants were 537 initially normotensive men from eastern Finland, who completed a medical examination and series of psychological questionnaires at baseline and at 4-year follow-up. Anger expression was assessed by Spielberger's Anger-out and Anger-in scales. RESULTS: At follow-up, 104 men (19.4%) were hypertensive (blood pressure > or = 165 mm Hg systolic and/or 95 mm Hg diastolic). Age-adjusted logistic regression analyses revealed that each 1-point increase in Anger-out was associated with a 12% increase in risk of hypertension after 4 years of follow-up (p < .002), which corresponded to a two-fold increased risk of hypertension among men with scores in the top tertile of the Anger-out scale, relative to those with scores in the bottom tertile (odds ratio = 2.00, 95% confidence interval 1.20-3.38). Each 1-point increase on the Anger-in scale also was related to a 12% increased risk of hypertension (p < .01). Adjustments for body mass index, smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, a positive parental history of hypertension, and baseline resting diastolic blood pressure had little impact on the findings. CONCLUSIONS: These data provide strong epidemiological evidence for a positive relationship between anger expression style and subsequent hypertension, independent of known risk factors. Findings support the hypothesis that extreme expression of anger in either direction has adverse cardiovascular consequences.
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PMID 
K Seppänen, R Laatikainen, J T Salonen, M Kantola, S Lötjönen, M Harri, L Nurminen, J Kaikkonen, K Nyyssönen (1998)  Mercury-binding capacity of organic and inorganic selenium in rat blood and liver.   Biol Trace Elem Res 65: 3. 197-210 Dec  
Abstract: The mercury-binding capacity of seleno-DL-methionine and selenium dioxide was assessed in male Wistar rats. Mercury was supplied as fish loaves made of northern pike or rainbow trout. We used a selenium concentration of 3.4 mg/kg fish, about sixfold compared to the equivalent quantity of mercury. Seleno-DL-methionine had a tendency to increase both methyl mercury and total mercury in blood, although it also seemed to reduce the proportion of methyl mercury of total mercury. Selenium dioxide lowered mercury levels by 24-29% both in the blood and in the liver of rats that were fed with northern pike.
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PMID 
S A Everson, D E Goldberg, S P Helmrich, T A Lakka, J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1998)  Weight gain and the risk of developing insulin resistance syndrome.   Diabetes Care 21: 10. 1637-1643 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Obesity and weight gain have been associated independently with hypertension, hyperinsulinemia, and dyslipidemia; however, prior research has not looked at the relation between weight gain from early adulthood to middle age and the development of this cluster of risk factors, known as insulin resistance syndrome. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The association between weight gain over 30 years (defined as the difference between measured weight in middle age and participant recall of their weight at age 20) and the odds of developing insulin resistance syndrome at middle age was examined in a population-based sample of 2,272 eastern Finnish men. RESULTS: Each 5% increase in weight over the reported weight at age 20 was associated with nearly a 20% greater risk of insulin resistance syndrome by middle age, after adjustment for age and height. Moreover, there was a strong graded association between categories of weight gain and risk of insulin resistance syndrome. Men with weight increases of 10-19%, 20-29%, or > or =30% since age 20 were 3.0, 4.7, or 10.6 times more likely to have insulin resistance syndrome, respectively, by middle age, compared with men within 10% of their weight at age 20. Adjustments for age, height, physical activity, smoking, education, and parental history of diabetes did not alter these findings. CONCLUSIONS: The odds of having developed the hemodynamic and metabolic abnormalities that characterize insulin resistance syndrome by middle adulthood were increasingly higher the greater the weight gain over the preceding 30 years. This study adds to the literature identifying deleterious effects of weight gain from young to middle adulthood.
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PMID 
H E Poulsen, S Loft, H Prieme, K Vistisen, J Lykkesfeldt, K Nyyssonen, J T Salonen (1998)  Oxidative DNA damage in vivo: relationship to age, plasma antioxidants, drug metabolism, glutathione-S-transferase activity and urinary creatinine excretion.   Free Radic Res 29: 6. 565-571 Dec  
Abstract: Oxidative DNA modification has been implicated in development of certain cancers and 8-oxodG, the most abundant and mutagenic DNA modification, has for some time been considered a biomarker of this activity. Urinary excretion of 8-oxodG over 24h has been used to estimate the rate of damage to DNA, and animal studies have supported this rationale. Reported determinants include tobacco smoking, heavy exercise, environmental pollution and individual oxygen consumption. Samples from three published studies were used to determine the association of urinary 8-oxodG excretion with age, plasma antioxidants, the glutathione-S-transferase phenotype and the activity of the xenobiotic metabolising enzyme CYP1A2. In the age range 35-65 years, age was not related to urinary 8-oxodG excretion, and there were no relations to either the glutathione-S-transferase phenotype or to the plasma antioxidants: vitamin C, alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene, lycopene or coenzyme Q10. The activity of CYP1A2 showed a significant correlation in two of the three studies, as well as a significant correlation of 0.26 (p < 0.05) in the pooled data set. Regression analysis of CYP1A2 activity on 8-oxodG indicated that 33% increase in CYP1A2 activity would correspond to a doubling of 8-oxodG excretion. This finding needs to be confirmed in independent experiments. Spot morning urine samples can under certain circumstances be used to estimate 8-oxodG excretion rate provided that creatinine excretion is unchanged (in paired experiments) or comparable (in un-paired experiments), as evaluated from the correlation between 8-oxodG excretion in 24 h urine samples and in morning spot urine samples corrected for creatinine excretion (r = 0.50, p < 0.05). We conclude that 8-oxodG excretion is determined by factors like oxygen consumption and CYP1A2 activity rather than by factors like plasma antioxidant concentrations.
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PMID 
J Kaikkonen, L Kosonen, K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, R Salonen, H Korpela, J T Salonen (1998)  Effect of combined coenzyme Q10 and d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate supplementation on exercise-induced lipid peroxidation and muscular damage: a placebo-controlled double-blind study in marathon runners.   Free Radic Res 29: 1. 85-92 Jul  
Abstract: To test the effects of combined coenzyme Q10 (Q10) and d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate supplementation on exercise-induced oxidative stress and muscular damage we conducted a double-blind study in 37 moderately trained male marathon runners. These were randomly allocated to receive either an antioxidant cocktail: 90 mg of Q10 and 13.5 mg of d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate daily (18 men) or placebo (19 men) for three weeks before a marathon (42km) run. Just before the run, plasma Q10 was 282% (p < 0.0001) and plasma vitamin E 16% (p < 0.007) higher in the supplemented group, than in the placebo group. Also the proportion of plasma ubiquinol of total Q10, an indication of plasma redox status in vivo, was significantly higher in the supplemented group. Furthermore, the susceptibility of the VLDL + LDL fraction, to copper-induced oxidation, was significantly reduced in the supplemented group, compared to the placebo group. The exercise increased lipid peroxidation significantly in both study groups, as assessed by the elevated proportion LDL of LDL and the increased susceptibility of lipoproteins to copper induced oxidation. However, the supplementation had no effect on lipid peroxidation or on the muscular damage (increase in serum creatine kinase activity or in plasma lactate levels) induced by exhaustive exercise. Plasma ascorbate, Q10, whole blood glutathione and serum uric acid concentrations increased during the exercise, elevating significantly the TRAP value of plasma by 10.3% and the proportion of plasma ubiquinol of total Q10 by 4.9%. These results suggest that even though exercise increases plasma lipid peroxidation, it also elevates the antioxidative capacity of plasma, as assessed by the increased plasma TRAP and the proportion of Q10H2 of total Q10. However, prior supplementation with small doses of Q10 and d-alpha-tocopheryl acetate neither attenuates the oxidation of lipoproteins nor muscular damage induced by exhaustive exercise such as encountered in a marathon run.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, T P Tuomainen, R Salonen, T A Lakka, K Nyyssönen (1998)  Donation of blood is associated with reduced risk of myocardial infarction. The Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Epidemiol 148: 5. 445-451 Sep  
Abstract: Because high body iron stores have been suggested as a risk factor for acute myocardial infarction, donation of blood could theoretically reduce the risk by lowering body iron stores. For this reason, the authors tested the hypothesis that voluntary blood donation is associated with reduced risk of acute myocardial infarction in a prospective epidemiologic follow-up study in men from eastern Finland. The subjects are all participants of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. A cohort of 2,862 men aged 42-60 years were followed for an average of almost 9 years. One man (0.7%) out of 153 men who had donated blood in 24 months preceding the baseline examination experienced an acute myocardial infarction during 1984 to 1995, whereas 316 men (12.5%) of 2,529 non-blood donors had an acute myocardial infarction (p < 0.0001 for difference between proportions). In a Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for age, examination years and all other predictive coronary disease risk factors, blood donors had a 88% reduced risk (relative hazard = 0.12, 95% confidence interval 0.02-0.86, p = 0.035) of acute myocardial infarction, compared with non-blood donors. These findings suggest that frequent blood loss through voluntary blood donations may be associated with a reduced risk of acute myocardial infarction in middle-aged men.
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1997
 
PMID 
T P Tuomainen, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, A Tervahauta, H Korpela, T Lakka, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1997)  Body iron stores are associated with serum insulin and blood glucose concentrations. Population study in 1,013 eastern Finnish men.   Diabetes Care 20: 3. 426-428 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To study if there is an association between mildly elevated body iron and glucose homeostasis indexes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A cross-sectional population study was conducted in 1,013 middle-aged men, and an association of serum ferritin with concentrations of serum insulin, blood glucose, and serum fructosamine was tested. RESULTS: The mean concentration of fasting serum insulin was 21.6% higher (95% CI 7.3-37.9%, P < 0.001) in the 5th quintile of serum ferritin compared with the 1st quintile. The elevation in blood glucose was 6.1% (95% CI 2.3-9.9%, P < 0.001) and in serum fructosamine 3.9% (1.5-6.9%, P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Mildly elevated body iron stores are associated with statistically significant elevations in glucose homeostasis indexes.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, M T Parviainen, R Salonen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1997)  Vitamin C deficiency and risk of myocardial infarction: prospective population study of men from eastern Finland.   BMJ 314: 7081. 634-638 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between plasma vitamin C concentrations and the risk of acute myocardial infarction. DESIGN: Prospective population study. SETTING: Eastern Finland. SUBJECTS: 1605 randomly selected men aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 who did not have either symptomatic coronary heart disease or ischaemia on exercise testing at entry to the Kuopio ischaemic heart disease risk factor study in between 1984 and 1989. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Number of acute myocardial infarctions; fasting plasma vitamin C concentrations at baseline. RESULTS: 70 of the men had a fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction between March 1984 and December 1992.91 men had vitamin C deficiency (plasma ascorbate < 11.4 mumol/l, or 2.0 mg/l), of whom 12 (13.2%) had a myocardial infarction; 1514 men were not deficient in vitamin C, of whom 58 (3.8%) had a myocardial infarction. In a Cox proportional hazards model adjusted for age, year of examination, and season of the year examined (August to October v rest of the year) men who had vitamin C deficiency had a relative risk of acute myocardial infarction of 3.5 (95% confidence interval 1.8 to 6.7, P = 0.0002) compared with those who were not deficient. In another model adjusted additionally for the strongest risk factors for myocardial infarction and for dietary intakes of tea fibre, carotene, and saturated fats men with a plasma ascorbate concentration < 11.4 mumol/l had a relative risk of 2.5 (1.3 to 5.2, P = 0.0095) compared with men with higher plasma vitamin C concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: Vitamin C deficiency, as assessed by low plasma ascorbate concentration, is a risk factor for coronary heart disease.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, H E Poulsen, M Hayn, P Agerbo, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J Kaikkonen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Effect of supplementation of smoking men with plain or slow release ascorbic acid on lipoprotein oxidation.   Eur J Clin Nutr 51: 3. 154-163 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To study the effects of two month ascorbic acid supplementation on in vitro lipoprotein oxidation resistance and on in vivo lipid peroxidation, and to compare the absorption of two ascorbic acid preparations. DESIGN: Randomized, single blinded and placebo-controlled clinical trial. SETTING: Men, aged 36-65 y, smoking 11-40 cigarettes daily. SUBJECTS: Sixty-two subjects were recruited by newspaper advertisements and randomized. Fifty-nine subjects completed the study. INTERVENTION: Subjects were randomized into three groups to receive 250 mg BID of plain or slow release ascorbic acid tablets or placebo daily for two months. In the pharmacokinetic part of the study, the absorption of the ascorbic acid preparations was followed for 12 h. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Plasma malondialdehyde (MDA) concentration and the oxidation resistance of VLDL + LDL. For the pharmacokinetic study, the area under the plasma concentration curve (AUC) of ascorbic acid. RESULTS: Plasma reduced ascorbic acid increased by 32% in the plain ascorbate group and by 54% in the slow release group during a two month supplementation. Plasma MDA increased in the plain ascorbic acid group compared with placebo group (P < 0.05), but there were no significant differences in the changes in lipoprotein oxidation reactions induced by copper or by hemin and H2O2. Plasma reduced and total ascorbic acid AUC values were significantly higher in both plain and slow release ascorbate groups compared with placebo group. CONCLUSIONS: Oral supplementation of 500 mg of ascorbic acid daily for two months alone without any other antioxidant does not appear to have protective effect on either in vitro lipoprotein oxidation resistance or in vivo lipid peroxidation in smoking men, but might even promote the formation of MDA.
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PMID 
S A Everson, J W Lynch, M A Chesney, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, S B Shade, R D Cohen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Interaction of workplace demands and cardiovascular reactivity in progression of carotid atherosclerosis: population based study.   BMJ 314: 7080. 553-558 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the combined influence of workplace demands and changes in blood pressure induced by stress on the progression of carotid atherosclerosis. DESIGN: Population based follow up study of unestablished as well as traditional risk factors for carotid atherosclerosis, ischaemic heart disease, and other outcomes. SETTING: Eastern Finland. SUBJECTS: 591 men aged 42-60 who were fully employed at baseline and had complete data on the measures of carotid atherosclerosis, job demands, blood pressure reactivity, and covariates. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Change in ultrasonographically assessed intima-media thickness of the right and left common carotid arteries from baseline to 4 year follow up. RESULTS: Significant interactions between workplace demands and stress induced reactivity were observed for all measures of progression (P < 0.04). Men with large changes in systolic blood pressure (20 mm Hg or greater) in anticipation of a maximal exercise test and with high job demands had 10-40% greater progression of mean (0.138 v 0.123 mm) and maximum (0.320 v 0.261 mm) intima-media thickness and plaque height (0.347 v 0.264) than men who were less reactive and had fewer job demands. Similar results were obtained after excluding men with prevalent ischaemic heart disease at baseline. Findings were strongest among men with at least 20% stenosis or non-stenotic plaque at baseline. In this subgroup reactive men with high job demands had more than 46% greater atherosclerotic progression than the others. Adjustment for atherosclerotic risk factors did not alter the results. CONCLUSIONS: Men who showed stress induced blood pressure reactivity and who reported high job demands experienced the greatest atherosclerotic progression, showing the association between dispositional risk characteristics and contextual determinants of disease and suggesting that behaviourally evoked cardiovascular reactivity may have a role in atherogenesis.
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PMID 
J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1997)  Why do poor people behave poorly? Variation in adult health behaviours and psychosocial characteristics by stages of the socioeconomic lifecourse.   Soc Sci Med 44: 6. 809-819 Mar  
Abstract: Attempts to explain socioeconomic inequalities in health have often made reference to the observation that poor health behaviours and psychosocial characteristics cluster in low socioeconomic status (SES) groups. Causal interpretation of the association between SES, health behaviour, psychosocial orientations, and health inequalities has been hampered because these factors and SES have usually been measured at the same point in time. Data from the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were used to examine the associations between measures of SES reflecting different stages of the lifecourse, health behaviours, and psychosocial characteristics in adulthood in a population-based study of 2674 middle-aged Finnish men. Results show that many adult behaviours and psychosocial dispositions detrimental to health are consistently related to poor childhood conditions, low levels of education, and blue-collar employment. Poor adult health behaviours and psychosocial characteristics were more prevalent among men whose parents were poor. Increases in income inequality which place children into low SES conditions may well produce a negative behavioural and psychosocial health dividend to be reaped in the future. Understanding that adult health behaviour and psychosocial orientations are associated with socioeconomic conditions throughout the lifecourse implies that efforts to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in health must recognize that economic policy is public health policy.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, R Salonen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, T P Tuomainen, U Diczfalusy, I Björkhem (1997)  Lipoprotein oxidation and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Circulation 95: 4. 840-845 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Epidemiological studies and animal experiments have provided evidence supporting the role of lipid peroxidation in atherogenesis and cardiovascular diseases. Direct evidence linking lipid oxidation to atherosclerotic progression in humans, however, has been lacking. We investigated the association of lipid oxidation products with the progression of early carotid atherosclerosis in hypercholesterolemic men from eastern Finland. METHODS AND RESULTS: Twenty subjects with a fast progression and 20 with no progression of carotid atherosclerosis in 3 years were selected from > 400 participants in the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study. Progression of carotid atherosclerosis was assessed by high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography. Serum 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol, a major oxidation product of cholesterol in membranes and lipoproteins, and seven other cholesterol oxidation products were measured by isotope dilution-mass spectrometry, lipid hydroperoxides in LDL fluorometrically as thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) and oxidation susceptibility of LDL and VLDL kinetically. High concentrations of serum 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol (beta = 47, P = .0005), cigarette smoking (beta = .35, P = .0167), and LDL TBARS (beta = .23, P = .0862) and an increased oxidation susceptibility of VLDL + LDL (beta = .22 P = .1114) were the strongest predictors of a 3-year increase in carotid wall thickness of more than 30 variables tested in step-up least-squares regression models. A 10-variable model explained 60% of the atherosclerotic progression. In a multivariate logistic model, the risk of experiencing a fast progression increased by 80% (P = .013) per unit (microgram/L) of 7 beta-hydroxycholesterol. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study provide further evidence to support an association between lipid oxidation and atherogenesis in humans.
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PMID 
J Kaikkonen, K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, H E Poulsen, T Metsä-Ketelä, M Hayn, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Effect of oral coenzyme Q10 supplementation on the oxidation resistance of human VLDL+LDL fraction: absorption and antioxidative properties of oil and granule-based preparations.   Free Radic Biol Med 22: 7. 1195-1202  
Abstract: Coenzyme Q10 (Q10) is supposed to be an important endogenous lipid-soluble antioxidant. We studied 60 healthy 46 +/- 7 (mean +/- SD)-year-old smoking men. They were randomized into three groups to receive oil-based or granular Q10 (90 mg/d) or placebo for 2 months. Oil-based capsule elevated Q10 in plasma by 178% and in VLDL+LDL fraction by 160%. The granular preparation increased Q10 in plasma by 168% and in VLDL+LDL by 127%. However, the 2-month Q10 supplementation did not increase the oxidation resistance of VLDL+LDL fraction, as assessed by copper induced VLDL+LDL oxidation, haemin+H(2)O(2)-induced VLDL+LDL oxidation, total antioxidative capacity of LDL, and plasma malondialdehyde measurements. The first and the last dose was used to carry out a 12 h pharmacokinetic study (five subjects per group), which indicated that only a small part of supplemented Q10 was absorbed to the circulation in 12 h and that the absorption varied extensively between subjects. Our results suggest that at least among smoking men, 90 mg of orally supplemented Q10 daily does not increase the oxidation resistance of VLDL+LDL. Bioavailability of both the granular and the oil-based Q10 preparation was similar during the long-term supplementation, but one dose of 30 mg had only a marginal effect on the plasma levels of Q10.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, H Rouhiainen, J T Salonen (1997)  The impact of early lens opacity progression on visual acuity and refraction.   Ophthalmologica 211: 4. 242-246  
Abstract: The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the change in visual acuity and refraction taking place in eyes with progressing early lens opacities. Four hundred and ten hypercholesterolemic men in Eastern Finland who participated in the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study were followed up for 3 years. Lens opacities were graded using the lens opacity classification system II (LOCS II). The change of visual acuity and refractive error from baseline to a 36-month examination was compared for different types of lens opacities. During the 3-year period, progression in the LOCS II was observed in 9.2% of the eyes for nuclear, in 4.8% for cortical and in 0.5% of the eyes for posterior subcapsular opacities. Increasing nuclear sclerosis reduced visual acuity statistically significantly both with and without correction. Hypermetropization was seen to continue in eyes with no lens opacity progression. Myopization was more common in eyes with lens opacity progression, although this was not statistically significant.
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PMID 
H Priemé, S Loft, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen, H E Poulsen (1997)  No effect of supplementation with vitamin E, ascorbic acid, or coenzyme Q10 on oxidative DNA damage estimated by 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine excretion in smokers.   Am J Clin Nutr 65: 2. 503-507 Feb  
Abstract: The protective effect of fruit and vegetables against cancer has been related to their high antioxidant content. However, results from intervention trials have not been conclusive on the protective effect of antioxidant supplementation. In a randomized placebo-controlled trial we investigated the effect of dietary supplementation with antioxidants on a biomarker of oxidative DNA damage with mechanistic relation to carcinogenesis. One hundred forty-two smoking men aged 35-65 y were randomly assigned to one of the following seven treatments for 2 mo: 100 mg D-alpha-tocopheryl acetate plus 250 mg slow-release ascorbic acid twice a day (n = 20), 100 mg D-alpha-tocopheryl acetate twice a day (n = 20), 250 mg ascorbic acid twice a day (n = 21), 250 mg slow-release ascorbic acid twice a day (n = 21), 30 mg coenzyme Q10 in oil three times a day (n = 20), 30 mg coenzyme Q10 as granulate three times a day (n = 20), or placebo twice a day (n = 20). The trial outcome was the urinary excretion rate of 8-oxo-7, 8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG)-a repair product of oxidative DNA damage. Two months of supplementation did not result in significant changes in the urinary excretion rate of 8-oxodG in any group. The lack of effect of antioxidant supplementation on the excretion rate of 8-oxodG, despite substantial increases in plasma antioxidant concentrations, agrees with the results from recent large intervention studies with cancer as an endpoint. The cancer-protective effect of fruit and vegetables seems to rely not on the effect of single antioxidants but rather on other anticarcinogenic compounds or on a concerted action of several micronutrients present in these foods.
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PMID 
J Lynch, G A Kaplan, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Socioeconomic status and progression of carotid atherosclerosis. Prospective evidence from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 17: 3. 513-519 Mar  
Abstract: Socioeconomic status (SES) is importantly associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, but no information exists on the relationship between SES and progression of atherosclerotic vascular disease. We investigated the association between education and income and the 4-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a population-based sample of Finnish men. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were used to estimate changes in maximum and mean intima-media thickness (IMT) and maximum plaque height across levels of SES in 1022 men. Associations between SES and atherosclerotic progression were examined in relation to risk factors and stratified by baseline levels of atherosclerosis and prevalent ischemic heart disease (IHD). There were significant, inverse, graded relationships between levels of education and income for all three progression measures, which were largely unaffected by risk factor adjustment. For education, the age- and baseline IMT-adjusted maximum progression for those with primary schooling or less was 0.28 mm and for those who graduated from high school, 0.24 mm (P = .05). Compared with the lowest SES group, men with the highest SES had 14% to 29% less atherosclerotic progression, depending on the measure used. Associations of the same magnitude were evident in subgroups without advanced baseline IMT and in men who were free of IHD. These results show that men with poor education and low income have significantly greater progression of carotid atherosclerosis than men with more advantages. The findings strengthen the contention that SES plays a significant role early in the atherosclerotic disease process and that reducing the burden of atherosclerotic vascular disease associated with lower SES will require approaches that focus on all stages of the life course.
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PMID 
S A Everson, J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, J Julkunen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1997)  Hostility and increased risk of mortality and acute myocardial infarction: the mediating role of behavioral risk factors.   Am J Epidemiol 146: 2. 142-152 Jul  
Abstract: Cynical hostility has been associated with increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality; yet few studies have investigated this relation in population-based samples, and little is known about underlying mechanisms. This study examined the association between hostility, measured by the eight-item Cynical Distrust Scale, and risk for all-cause and cardiovascular mortality and incident myocardial infarction. Subjects were 2,125 men, ages 42-60 years, from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a longitudinal study of unestablished and traditional risk factors for ischemic heart disease, mortality, and other outcomes. There were 177 deaths (73 cardiovascular) in 9 years of follow-up. Men with hostility scores in the top quartile were at more than twice the risk of all-cause mortality (relative hazards (RH) 2.30, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.47-3.59) and cardiovascular mortality (RH 2.70, 95% CI 1.27-5.76), relative to men with scores in the lowest quartile. Among 1,599 men without previous myocardial infarction or angina, high scorers also had an increased risk of myocardial infarction (RH 2.18, 95% CI 1.01-4.70). Biologic and socioeconomic risk factors, social support, and prevalent diseases had minimal impact on these associations, whereas adjustments for the behavioral risk factors of smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, and body mass index substantially weakened the relations. Simultaneous risk factor adjustment eliminated the observed associations. Results show that high levels of hostility are associated with increased risk of all-cause and cause-specific mortality and incident myocardial infarction and that these effects are mediated primarily through behavioral risk factors.
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PMID 
S A Everson, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Hopelessness and 4-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis. The Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 17: 8. 1490-1495 Aug  
Abstract: The importance of hope has long been recognized, whereas a lack of hope, or "giving up," is generally believed to have a negative impact on psychological well-being and physical health. Recently, hopelessness has been identified as a strong, independent predictor of cardiovascular disease morbidity and mortality in both American and Finnish populations. In this study we examined the association between high levels of hopelessness and progression of carotid atherosclerosis in participants (n = 942) in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Study, a population-based study of middle-aged men from eastern Finland who underwent carotid ultrasonography at baseline and 4 years later. Men reporting high levels of hopelessness at baseline had faster progression of carotid atherosclerosis, assessed by four measures of intima-media thickening (IMT), than men reporting low to moderate levels of hopelessness. Further analyses revealed significant interactions between hopelessness and initial level of atherosclerosis, such that the effects of high hopelessness on progression were greatest among men who had baseline mean IMT values at or above the median. Moreover, progression was greatest among men reporting high levels of hopelessness at both baseline and follow-up. Traditional coronary risk factors and use of cholesterol-lowering and antihypertensive medications did not account for much variance in the observed relationships. These findings indicate that hopelessness contributes to accelerated progression of carotid atherosclerosis, particularly among men with early evidence of atherosclerosis, and that chronically high levels of hopelessness may be especially detrimental. Additional research is needed to identify the contributory pathways and/or mechanisms underlying these relationships.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, J T Salonen (1997)  Beer binging and mortality: results from the Kuopio ischaemic heart disease risk factor study, a prospective population based study.   BMJ 315: 7112. 846-851 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between beer binging (regular sessions of heavy beer drinking) and mortality. DESIGN: Prospective population based study with the baseline assessment of level of alcohol intake (dose), by type of drink and drinking pattern, previous and existing diseases, socioeconomic background, occupational status, involvement in organisations during leisure time, physical activity in leisure time, body mass index, blood pressure, serum lipids and plasma fibrinogen concentration, during an average of 7.7 years' follow up of mortality. SETTING: Finland. SUBJECTS: A population sample of 1641 men who consumed beer who were aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years at baseline. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: All cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, death due to external causes, fatal myocardial infarctions. RESULTS: The risk of death was substantially increased in men whose usual dose of beer was 6 or more bottles per session compared with men who usually consumed less than 3 bottles, after adjustment for age and total alcohol consumption (relative risk 3.01 (95% confidence interval 1.54 to 5.90) for all deaths; 7.10 (2.01 to 25.12) for external deaths; and 6.50 (2.05 to 20.61) for fatal myocardial infarction). The association changed only slightly when smoking, occupational status, previous diseases, systolic blood pressure, low density lipoprotein and high density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration, plasma fibrinogen concentration, body mass index, marital status, leisure time physical activity, and involvement in organisations were controlled for. CONCLUSION: The pattern of beer binging is associated with increased risk of death, independently of the total average consumption of alcoholic drinks. The relation is not explained by known behavioural, psychosocial, or biological risk factors. Death due to injuries and other external causes is overrepresented among beer bingers, but a strong association with fatal myocardial infarction suggests that the pathway may also involve other acute triggers of severe health events.
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PMID 
N Krause, J Lynch, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, D E Goldberg, J T Salonen (1997)  Predictors of disability retirement.   Scand J Work Environ Health 23: 6. 403-413 Dec  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: Disability retirement may increase as the work force ages, but there is little information on factors associated with retirement because of disability. This is the first prospective population-based study of predictors of disability retirement including information on workplace, socioeconomic, behavioral, and health-related factors. METHODS: The subjects were 1038 Finnish men who were enrolled in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, who were 42, 48, 54, or 60 years of age at the beginning of the study, and who participated in a 4-year follow-up medical examination. RESULTS: Various job characteristics predicted disability retirement. Heavy work, work in uncomfortable positions, long workhours, noise at work, physical job strain, musculoskeletal strain, repetitive or continuous muscle strain, mental job strain, and job dissatisfaction were all significantly associated with the incidence of disability retirement. The ability to communicate with fellow workers and social support from supervisors tended to reduce the risk of disability retirement. The relationships persisted after control for socioeconomic factors, prevalent disease, and health behavior, which were also associated with disability retirement. CONCLUSIONS: The strong associations found between workplace factors and the incidence of disability retirement link the problem of disability retirement to the problem of poor work conditions.
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PMID 
J Lynch, N Krause, G A Kaplan, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Workplace demands, economic reward, and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Circulation 96: 1. 302-307 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Characteristics of the work environment have been associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, but it is unclear whether these factors are associated with preclinical manifestations of disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: We investigated the association between job demands, economic reward, and the 4-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a population-based sample of 940 Finnish men. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were used to estimate changes in plaque height, maximum and mean intima-media thicknesses across combinations of job demands, and income. Associations were examined in relation to atherosclerotic risk factors and were stratified by baseline levels of atherosclerosis and prevalent ischemic heart disease. Men who had jobs with high demands and low economic rewards had significantly greater 4-year progression of plaque height (0.33 mm, P = .008) and maximum intima-media thickness (0.32, P = .03) than men with low-demand, high-income jobs. The magnitude of these differences was not greatly attenuated by risk factor adjustment and did not differ when examined by the level of workplace resources, social support, or employment status. Larger differences were observed in a subsample of men who had more advanced atherosclerosis at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: These results show that men with demanding work that produces little economic reward have significantly greater progression of carotid atherosclerosis than more advantaged men. The relationship between job demands and health should be understood in a broad framework of interacting economic conditions, social circumstances, and behaviors that cascade over the life course and may ultimately contribute to socioeconomic inequalities in morbidity and mortality.
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PMID 
T W Kamarck, S A Everson, G A Kaplan, S B Manuck, J R Jennings, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Exaggerated blood pressure responses during mental stress are associated with enhanced carotid atherosclerosis in middle-aged Finnish men: findings from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Study.   Circulation 96: 11. 3842-3848 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Exaggerated cardiovascular reactivity to mental stress is hypothesized to increase atherosclerotic risk. We examined this hypothesis using cross-sectional data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease study, a population-based epidemiological sample. METHODS AND RESULTS: 901 Eastern Finnish men from four age cohorts (age, 42 to 60 years) were administered a standardized testing battery to assess cardiovascular reactivity to mental stress. Ultrasound measures of intima-medial thickness (IMT) and plaque height from the common carotid arteries were used as noninvasive markers of atherosclerosis. Diastolic blood pressure (DBP) responses to mental stress were significantly associated with mean IMT (b=.021, P=.006), maximum IMT (b=.026, P=.013), and mean plaque height (b=.017, P=.041). Significant associations were also shown between stress-related systolic blood pressure (SBP) reactivity and mean IMT (b=.0151, P=.042). When examined separately by age, associations with IMT were significant only in the youngest half of the sample (age, 46 and 52 years, n=433; for mean IMT, DBP b=.033, P=.0002, SBP b=.0266, P=.003; for maximum IMT, DBP b=.039, P=.002, SBP b=.032, P=.011). Results remained significant in the younger subjects after adjustment for smoking, lipid profiles, fasting glucose, and resting blood pressure (b=.024, P=.011); results also remained significant in a subgroup of unmedicated younger subjects without symptomatic cardiovascular disease (n=135; for SBP reactivity, b=.031, P=.036; for DBP, b=.037, P=.007). CONCLUSIONS: The tendency to show exaggerated pressor responses to mental stress is a significant independent correlate of atherosclerosis in this population sample of Finnish men. The effect does not appear to be accounted for by the confounding influence of other risk factors or preexisting clinical disease.
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PMID 
J R Jennings, T Kamarck, S Manuck, S A Everson, G Kaplan, J T Salonen (1997)  Aging or disease? Cardiovascular reactivity in Finnish men over the middle years.   Psychol Aging 12: 2. 225-238 Jun  
Abstract: Cardiovascular responses to psychological events may mediate the influence of stress on cardiovascular disease. In this study the authors asked whether cardiovascular responses to psychological challenge changed with age and whether such changes were intrinsic to aging or could be attributed to the influence of disease and medications. Cardiovascular reactivity to mental challenge was examined in 902 men ranging in age from 46 to 64 years who participated in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. A battery of 4 tasks was used to induce cardiovascular responses. Current disease status, age, and medication use were entered into hierarchical regression analyses to assess their relation with measures of cardiovascular reactivity. Age and hypertension contributed independent, approximately equal, but small amounts of variance in the cardiac and vascular reactivity indexes. Medications also influenced reactivity independently of age and disease. Performance on the tasks was more consistently altered by age than by disease or medication. Cardiac and vascular reactivity increased with increasing age and the presence of hypertension. The authors conclude that both age and disease state must be considered when examining cardiovascular reactivity as a risk factor for disease.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J Kaikkonen, J T Salonen (1997)  Ascorbate and urate are the strongest determinants of plasma antioxidative capacity and serum lipid resistance to oxidation in Finnish men.   Atherosclerosis 130: 1-2. 223-233 Apr  
Abstract: Copper-induced plasma lipoprotein oxidation resistance has usually been determined in separated low density lipoprotein (LDL) fractions, that do not contain water-soluble antioxidants present in blood plasma. The aim of this study was to find the main determinants of the measurements of copper-induced lipid oxidation resistance (lag time) in whole serum and plasma total peroxyl radical trapping capacity (TRAP) in a population sample of smoking (n = 25) or non-smoking (n = 26) middle aged men at high risk of cardiovascular diseases. Smokers had significantly lower plasma ascorbic acid values, but only slightly lower alpha-tocopherol, beta-carotene and serum urate values than non-smokers. Plasma ascorbic acid concentration explained 23.5% of the lag time variation (standardized regression coefficient beta = 0.48; P = 0.004) in smokers and 5.6% in non-smokers. Serum urate concentration was the strongest determinant of lag time in non-smokers (beta = 0.64, P < 0.001). In addition, serum albumin, lipid standardized alpha-tocopherol and serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol entered the multivariate regression mode for lag time. For plasma TRAP, only urate and ascorbic acid entered the multivariate regression model. Lag times in serum and in isolated very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and LDL fraction did not correlate, but the maximal rate of these reactions correlated significantly. These results confirm that lipid peroxidation resistance in serum or plasma are associated with ascorbic acid, urate, alpha-tocopherol, albumin and HDL concentrations. The measurement of lipid oxidation resistance in whole serum might be more physiological than in isolated lipoprotein fraction, as the effects of water-soluble antioxidants are not artificially removed.
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PMID 
J Lynch, N Krause, G A Kaplan, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1997)  Workplace conditions, socioeconomic status, and the risk of mortality and acute myocardial infarction: the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Public Health 87: 4. 617-622 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study investigated whether the association between workplace conditions and the risk of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality and acute myocardial infarction differed by socioeconomic status. METHODS: Prospective data were used to examine these associations in 2297 Finnish men, with adjustment for prevalent diseases and biological, behavioral, and psychosocial covariates, and stratified by employment status and workplace social support. RESULTS: Elevated age-adjusted relative hazards for all-cause mortality were found for men who reported high demands, low resources, and low income; high demands, high resources, and low income; and low demands, high resources, and low income. Similar patterns were found for cardiovascular mortality. In contrast, elevated age-adjusted relative hazards for acute myocardial infarction were observed only in men who reported high demands, low resources, and low income. These results did not differ by level of workplace social support or employment status. CONCLUSIONS: The negative effects of workplace conditions on mortality and of myocardial infarction risk depended on income level and were largely mediated by known risk factors.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, D D Goldberg, R D Cohen, T A Lakka, J T Salonen (1997)  Frequent hangovers and cardiovascular mortality in middle-aged men.   Epidemiology 8: 3. 310-314 May  
Abstract: We studied the relation between frequent hangovers and cardiovascular mortality in a representative population sample of middle-aged Finnish men who participated in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Complete data on alcohol consumption, hangover frequency, prior cardiovascular diseases, and risk factors were obtained for 2,160 non-abstinent men. Frequent hangovers were rare in the three lowest alcohol consumption quartiles, but in the highest quartile, a total of 239 men (43.6%) reported having a hangover at least monthly. During an average follow-up time of 6.7 years, these men had a 2.36-fold (95% confidence interval = 1.02-5.48) risk of cardiovascular death compared with men with fewer hangovers, with adjustment for age and total alcohol consumption. The association was somewhat attenuated after adjustments for smoking, income, and prior cardiovascular diseases. Systolic blood pressure, body mass index, resting heart rate, or serum lipids had no appreciable role in the relation, but plasma fibrinogen concentration appeared as one possible pathway to increased risk of cardiovascular death in men who frequently experience hangovers. The findings underline the importance of preventive actions regarding not only the amount but also the way people consume alcohol.
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1996
 
PMID 
A M Louheranta, E K Porkkala-Sarataho, M K Nyyssönen, R M Salonen, J T Salonen (1996)  Linoleic acid intake and susceptibility of very-low-density and low density lipoproteins to oxidation in men.   Am J Clin Nutr 63: 5. 698-703 May  
Abstract: Lipoprotein peroxidation is thought to play an important role in atherogenesis. In the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (KAPS) the intake of fat and fatty acids, the oxidation susceptibility of the plasma very-low-density + low-density lipoprotein (VLDL+LDL) fraction (by induction with copper or hemin and hydrogen peroxide), and concentrations of plasma antioxidants, serum lipids, and lipoproteins were measured in 393 men. In the multivariate-regression model dietary linoleic acid was the most important determinant of the maximal oxidation velocity for the hemin assay (standardized regression coefficient = 0.294, P<0.0001). In the copper assay the association of dietary linoleic acid and maximal oxidation velocity was second in order of strength (standardized regression coefficient = 0.324, P< 0.0001). We conclude that high linoleic acid intake is associated with increased oxidation susceptibility of atherogenic lipoproteins in men.
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PMID 
S A Everson, G A Kaplan, D E Goldberg, J T Salonen (1996)  Anticipatory blood pressure response to exercise predicts future high blood pressure in middle-aged men.   Hypertension 27: 5. 1059-1064 May  
Abstract: Increases in blood pressure during the period of emotional arousal attendant to impending exertion are well documented, yet the etiologic significance of these elevations is unknown. Research suggests that exaggerated cardiovascular responses to psychological stress may be importantly related to hypertension. We examined blood pressure reactivity in anticipation of an exercise stress test in relation to future hypertension in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, a population-based study of middle-aged men from Eastern Finland. Subjects were 508 unmedicated men with resting blood pressure less than 165/95 mm Hg who completed a bicycle ergometer stress test at baseline and whose hypertensive status was assessed at 4 years of follow-up. Systolic and diastolic reactivity were calculated as the difference between blood pressure measured after seated rest on the bicycle ergometer before initiation of exercise and mean seated resting blood pressure measured 1 week earlier. Logistic regression models adjusted for age and resting blood pressure revealed a graded association between quartiles of reactivity and risk of subsequent hypertension ( > or = 165/95 mm Hg), with men showing systolic responses greater than or equal to 30 mm Hg or diastolic responses greater than 15 mm Hg at nearly four times the risk of becoming hypertensive (odds ratios, 3.80 [95% confidence interval, 1.90 to 7.63] and 3.65 [95% confidence interval, 1.86 to 7.17], respectively) relative to the least-reactive groups (systolic response, < 10 mm Hg; diastolic response, < 5 mm Hg). Adjustments for traditional risk factors for hypertension did not alter these associations. Results demonstrate the clinical significance of the pressor response in anticipation of exercise and support the hypothesis that cardiovascular reactivity to psychological challenge plays a role in the etiology of hypertension.
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PMID 
S A Everson, D E Goldberg, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, E Pukkala, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1996)  Hopelessness and risk of mortality and incidence of myocardial infarction and cancer.   Psychosom Med 58: 2. 113-121 Mar/Apr  
Abstract: We examined the relationship among low, moderate, and high levels of hopelessness, all-cause and cause-specific mortality, and incidence of myocardial infarction (MI) and cancer in a population-based sample of middle-aged men. Participants were 2428 men, ages 42 to 60, from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease study, an ongoing longitudinal study of unestablished psychosocial risk factors for ischemic heart disease and other outcomes. In 6 years of follow-up, 174 deaths (87 cardiovascular and 87 noncardiovascular, including 40 cancer deaths and 29 deaths due to violence or injury), 73 incident cancer cases, and 95 incident MI had occurred. Men were rated low, moderate, or high in hopelessness if they scored in the lower, middle, or upper one-third of scores on a 2-item hopelessness scale. Age-adjusted Cox proportional hazards models identified a dose-response relationship such that moderately and highly hopeless men were at significantly increased risk of all-cause and cause-specific mortality relative to men with low hopelessness scores. Indeed, highly hopeless men were at more than three-fold increased risk of death from violence or injury compared with the reference group. These relationships were maintained after adjusting for biological, socioeconomic, or behavioral risk factors, perceived health, depression, prevalent disease, or social support. High hopelessness also predicted incident MI, and moderate hopelessness was associated with incident cancer. Our findings indicate that hopelessness is a strong predictor of adverse health outcomes, independent of depression and traditional risk factors. Additional research is needed to examine phenomena that lead to hopelessness.
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PMID 
D E Grobbee, P J Koudstaal, M L Bots, L A Amaducci, P C Elwood, J Ferro, A Freire de Concalves, O Krüger, D Inzitari, Y Nikitin, J T Salonen, J Sivenius, W Scheuermann, D S Thelle, A Trichopoulou, J T Tuomilehto (1996)  Incidence and risk factors of ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke in Europe. EUROSTROKE: A collaborative study among research centres in Europe: rationale and design.   Neuroepidemiology 15: 6. 291-300  
Abstract: EUROSTROKE is a collaborative study among ten European research centres to investigate (1) the variation in incidence of fatal and non-fatal ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke among populations in different European countries; (2) whether the observed differences in stroke incidence across countries can be explained by differences in prevalence of established cardiovascular risk factors; (3) the relative importance of selected dietary factors (potassium intake, smoking, alcohol consumption), haemostatic disturbances (fibrinogen) and co-morbidity (rheumatic heart disease, atrial fibrillation) compared to established risk factors as determinants of the occurrence of ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke. The EUROSTROKE database is drawn from ten European population-based prospective follow-up studies (cohorts) and is designed as a case-control study nested within these ten ongoing studies.
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PMID 
J Lynch, S P Helmrich, T A Lakka, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1996)  Moderately intense physical activities and high levels of cardiorespiratory fitness reduce the risk of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in middle-aged men.   Arch Intern Med 156: 12. 1307-1314 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Physical activity has been advocated as an important factor in the primary prevention of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM), but information concerning the specific intensities and durations that are protective has been unavailable. OBJECTIVE: To examine prospectively the association between self-reported levels of the intensity and duration of physical activities, and cardiorespiratory fitness (assessed by respiratory gas exchange) and incident cases of NIDDM (assessed by the oral glucose tolerance test) in a population-based sample of 897 middle-aged Finnish men. RESULTS: After adjustment for age, baseline glucose values, body mass index, serum triglyceride levels, parental history of diabetes, and alcohol consumption, moderately intense physical activities (> or = 5.5 metabolic units) that were undertaken for at least a 40-minute duration per week were associated with a reduced risk of NIDDM (odds ration [OR], 0.44; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.22-0.88). Activities with less than an intensity of 5.5 metabolic units, regardless of their duration, were not protective. Cardiorespiratory fitness levels greater than 31.0 mL of oxygen per kilogram per minute were protective against NIDDM (OR, 0.26; 95% CI, 0.08-0.82). A subgroup of men at high risk of NIDDM, because they were overweight and were hypertensive and had a positive parental history of NIDDM, who engaged in moderately intense physical activities above the 40-min/wk duration reduced their risk of NIDDM by 64% compared with men who did not participate in such activities. CONCLUSIONS: After adjustment for age, baseline glucose levels, and known risk factors, physical activities with an intensity of 5.5 metabolic units or greater and a duration of 40 minutes or greater per week protected against the development of NIDDM. These protective effects were even more pronounced in a subgroup of men who were at high risk for the development of the disease.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, J Kauhanen, J T Salonen (1996)  Conditioning leisure time physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness in sociodemographic groups of middle-ages men in eastern Finland.   Int J Epidemiol 25: 1. 86-93 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Physical inactivity and poor cardiorespiratory fitness have been found to be associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease, hypertension, stroke, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and cancer METHODS: To characterize the least active and the least fit sociodemographic groups of middle-aged males, we investigated conditioning leisure time physical activity and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) in a population sample of 2589 men aged 42-60 years in Eastern Finland. RESULTS: In covariate models, younger (P = 0.004), rural (P < 0.001), married or engaged (P = 0.04), lower income (P = 0.009), and employed men (P < 0.001), as well as farmers (P < 0.001) had a shorter duration of physical activity, whereas older (P < 0.001), urban (P = 0.05), single (P < 0.001), less educated (P < 0.0001), lower income (P < 0.001), and unemployed or retired men (P < 0.001), as well as blue-collar workers (P < 0.001) had a lower mean intensity of physical activity than others. Older (P < 0.001), single (P < 0.001), less educated (P < 0.001), lower income (P < 0.001), and unemployed or retired men (P < 0.001), as well as blue-collar workers and farmers (P < 0.001) had lower VO2max than others. CONCLUSION: On the basis of our data, for health promotion regarding physical activity, special attention should be paid to people in a lower socioeconomic position.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, H Rouhiainen, J T Salonen (1996)  Lens opacity increase in a longitudinal study: comparison of the lens opacities classification system II and lensmeter 701.   Curr Eye Res 15: 3. 293-297 Mar  
Abstract: We evaluated the ability of Lensmeter 701 (LOM) to detect changes in the transparency of the lens graded with the Lens Opacities Classification System II (LOCS II). In this prospective study 410 middle-aged Eastern Finnish men participating in the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study were examined three times at eighteen month intervals, and lens opacities were graded with both LOM and LOCS II, the latter serving as the standard. Majority of the change in the LOM reading during the follow-up fell within the 95% tolerance interval of the apparatus (3.08 units). Only four eyes showing progression by LOCS II were detected by LOM. The association between LOM change and the change observed by LOCS II was not statistically significant, and the correspondence of the two methods was weak. It seems that the sensitivity of the LOM is not sufficient to detect small changes in the transparency of the lens over time.
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PMID 
R P Byington, J W Jukema, J T Salonen, B Pitt, A V Bruschke, H Hoen, C D Furberg, G B Mancini (1996)  Reduction of cardiovascular events with pravastatin. A pooled analysis of clinical events within the scope of the Pravastatin Atherosclerosis Intervention Program   Fortschr Med 114: 8. 91-98 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: It has been documented that the HMG coenzyme A reductase inhibitors, or statins, can decrease cardiovascular events and mortality in patients with clinical coronary disease and moderately to severely elevated lipid levels. Additional data are required to demonstrate a reduction of vascular events in coronary patients with less than severely elevated lipid levels and in subgroups of this population. METHODS AND RESULTS: Clinical data from four atherosclerosis regression trials that evaluated pravastatin were pooled for a predetermined analysis of the effect of that agent on the risk of coronary events. All trials were double-masked, placebo-controlled designs that used pravastatin as monotherapy for 2 to 3 years. The 1891 participants in the trials had evidence of atherosclerosis and mildly to moderately elevated lipid levels. For fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, there was a 62% reduction in events attributable to pravastatin (p = .001). This effect was evident in younger and older patients, men and women, and patients with and without histories of hypertension and prior infarction. There was a 46% reduction in all-cause mortality (p = 17), which, although not statistically significant, is consistent with the results of other statin trials. There also was a 62% reduction in the risk of fatal or nonfatal stroke (p = .054). CONCLUSIONS: These pooled results provide strong evidence that pravastatin reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with atherosclerotic disease and mildly to moderately elevated lipid levels. The benefit for reducing myocardial infarction is evident in older and younger patients, men and women, and patients with and without histories of hypertension and prior infarction.
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PMID 
J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1996)  Do cardiovascular risk factors explain the relation between socioeconomic status, risk of all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and acute myocardial infarction?   Am J Epidemiol 144: 10. 934-942 Nov  
Abstract: Much remains to be understood about how low socioeconomic status (SES) increases cardiovascular disease and mortality risk. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (1984-1993) were used to estimate the associations between acute myocardial infarction and income, all-cause mortality, and cardiovascular mortality in a population-based sample of 2,272 Finnish men, with adjustment for 23 biologic, behavioral, psychologic, and social risk factors. Compared with the highest income quintile, those in the bottom quintile had age-adjusted relative hazards of 3.14 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.77-5.56), 2.66 (95% CI 1.25-5.66), and 4.34 (95% CI 1.95-9.66) for all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, and AMI, respectively. After adjustment for risk factors, the relative hazards for the same comparisons were 1.32 (95% CI 0.70-2.49), 0.70 (95% CI 0.29-1.69), and 2.83 (95% CI 1.14-7.00). In the lowest income quintile, adjustment for risk factors reduced the excess relative risk of all-cause mortality by 85%, that of cardiovascular mortality by 118%, and that of acute myocardial infarction by 45%. These data show how the association between SES and cardiovascular mortality and all-cause mortality is mediated by known risk factor pathways, but full "explanations" for these associations will need to encompass why these biologic, behavioral, psychologic, and social risk factors are differentially distributed by SES.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, J Julkunen, J T Salonen (1996)  Alexithymia and risk of death in middle-aged men.   J Psychosom Res 41: 6. 541-549 Dec  
Abstract: We prospectively examined the association between alexithymia and risk of death over an average follow-up time of nearly 5.5 years in 42- to 60-year-old men (N = 2297) participating in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). Alexithymia, impairment in identification, processing, and verbal expression of inner feelings, was assessed by the validated Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) In age-adjusted survival analyses, men in the highest alexithymia quintile had a twofold greater risk of all-cause death (p < 0.001) and a threefold greater risk of death from accidents, injury, or violence (p < 0.02) relative to the men in the three lowest alexithymia quintiles. There was little evidence for confounding by behavioral factors (smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity). physiological risk factors (LDL, HDL, body mass index, hypertension), socioeconomic status, marital status, perceived health, prior diseases and diagnoses, depressive symptoms or social connections. Consistent and even stronger associations between alexithymia and all-cause death were found in a healthy subgroup (N = 1650). Why difficulties in dealing with emotions associate with increased mortality remains unclear. Our findings suggest that the association is independent from the effect of well-known behavioral, biological, and psychosocial risk factors.
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PMID 
E Porkkala-Sarataho, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1996)  Increased oxidation resistance of atherogenic plasma lipoproteins at high vitamin E levels in non-vitamin E supplemented men.   Atherosclerosis 124: 1. 83-94 Jul  
Abstract: The oxidative modification of human low density lipoprotein (LDL) has been widely investigated. However, there are no data concerning the oxidation susceptibility of combined very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), intermediate density lipoprotein (IDL) and low density lipoprotein fraction, although all of them are atherogenic and contain antioxidants such as alpha-tocopherol. We investigated the oxidation susceptibility and oxidation resistance of VLDL + LDL (including IDL) fraction by induction with CuCl2 and its relation to plasma alpha-tocopherol concentration and lipid standardised alpha-tocopherol concentration in 406 non-vitamin E-supplemented men from eastern Finland. Even thought we did not give oral vitamin E or any other antioxidant supplementation to our study participants, we observed a significant, consistent relationship between measurements of oxidation resistance and plasma content of vitamin E. In the multivariate regression model, a high plasma content of vitamin E or lipid standardised vitamin E concentration were the most important determinants of lag time to maximal oxidation rate (standardised regression coefficient = 0.244, P < 0.0001 for vitamin E and 0.211, P < 0.0001 for lipid standardised vitamin E). After statistical adjustment for age, use of cigarettes, hypolipidemic medication (yes vs. no), month of the measurements, plasma concentrations of total ascorbic acid (ascorbic acid + dehydroascorbic acid), beta-carotene and phospholipids, serum concentrations of LDL cholesterol and triglycerides and dietary intake of linoleic acid, the lag time to maximal oxidation rate was 10% (95% C.I. 6.0-13.5%) longer in men in the highest fifth than in the lowest fifth of plasma vitamin E content (P < 0.0001 for trend). When the fifths of lipid standardised vitamin E were compared, the lag time to maximal oxidation rate was 6% (95% C.I. 1.8-10.1%) longer in men in the highest than in the lowest fifth (P < 0.0001 for trend). Our data suggest that alpha-tocopherol is an important antioxidant preventing the in vitro oxidation of VLDL + LDL fraction even in non-supplemented subjects.
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PMID 
J Räsänen, J Kauhanen, T A Lakka, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1996)  Religious affiliation and all-cause mortality: a prospective population study in middle-aged men in eastern Finland.   Int J Epidemiol 25: 6. 1244-1249 Dec  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Previous data suggest a favourable association between religion and mortality. METHODS: We investigated the association between selected religious groups and all-cause mortality in 1627 eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years during 1984-1989 as a part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). RESULTS: Eastern Orthodox men had a 5.1-fold (95% confidence interval [Cl: 1.98-13.3, P < 0.001) mortality as compared with Lutheran men after adjusting for main confounders. Adjustment for different sets of covariates did not affect the magnitude of relative hazard (RH) notably. Adjusted for the examination year, age, family history of coronary heart disease (CHD), and ischaemia in exercise electrocardiograms, RH was 4.4 (95% CI: 2.5-7.5, P < 0.001) and 4.7 (95% CI: 2.7-8.3, P < 0.001) after an additional adjustment for serum cholesterol, blood leucocytes, plasma fibrinogen, serum triglycerides, maximal oxygen uptake, height, and weight. With adjustment for income, childhood socioeconomic status (SES), and years of education RH for the Orthodox religion was 4.2 (95% CI: 2.4-7.3, P < 0.001) and 4.4 (95% CI: 2.5-7.7; P < 0.001) with depression, helplessness, quality of relationships, marital status and organizational participation, and 4.1 (95% CI: 2.4-7.2, P < 0.001) when adjusted for the use of tobacco and alcohol and the intensity of physical activity. After adjustment for migration because of the war the RH was 4.5 (95% CI: 1.9-10.8, P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that mortality risk varies substantially by religious affiliation, and this variation cannot be attributed to differences in measures for a wide variety of health, behavioural, socioeconomic, biological, social, and other characteristics.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, J Kaikkonen, J T Salonen (1996)  Characterization and determinants of an electronegatively charged low-density lipoprotein in human plasma.   Scand J Clin Lab Invest 56: 8. 681-689 Dec  
Abstract: There is evidence that oxidative modification of low density lipoprotein (LDL) is an important step in the atherosclerotic process. Electronegatively charged LDL has been found in the atherosclerotic lesions of rabbit and human and it is supposed to represent an early modification of LDL in the oxidative process in vivo. We describe a chromatographic method for determination of an LDL subfraction (LDL-) percentage from plasma LDL and the investigation of the lipid composition of native LDL and LDL- fractions separated by this method. We also studied the main determinants of the change in plasma LDL- level in a population sample of 45 men during a 6-months follow-up period. The LDL- fraction separated by anion-exchange chromatography had significantly higher triglyceride and free cholesterol and significantly lower phospholipid and total cholesterol contents, and lower alpha-tocopherol to triglyceride ratio than native LDL. In a 6-month follow up of 45 subjects, decreases in the ratio of blood glutathione disulphide to reduced glutathione, in serum LDL cholesterol and in serum n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, and an increase in plasma beta-carotene concentration had independent associations with a decrease of LDL-. The linear regression model including only these four variables was able to account for 47% of the variation of LDL-. Our findings suggest that the change in the plasma LDL- percentage measured by an anion-exchange liquid chromatography is predicted by changes in the major determinants of lipid peroxidation.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, H Rouhiainen, J T Salonen (1996)  Association between low plasma vitamin E concentration and progression of early cortical lens opacities.   Am J Epidemiol 144: 5. 496-500 Sep  
Abstract: The authors evaluated the association between plasma vitamin E content and progression of eye lens opacities. A total of 410 hypercholesterolemic eastern Finnish men participated in the study from January 1990 to September 1993 in Kuopio, Finland. Lens opacities were classified three times at 18-month intervals using the Lens Opacities Classification System II. A low plasma vitamin E level (lowest quartile) was associated with a 3.7-fold excess risk (95% confidence interval 1.2-11.8) of the progression of early cortical lens opacities compared with the highest quartile (p = 0.028). In addition, the number of cigarettes smoked daily was a significant predictor of the progression of cortical lens opacity (relative risk = 1.06 per cigarette, 95% confidence interval 1.003-1.12). The progression of nuclear lens opacities was not associated with either the plasma vitamin E content or smoking. The data suggest that low plasma vitamin E content may be associated with increased risk of the progression of early cortical lens opacity.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, H Rouhiainen, J T Salonen (1996)  Contrast sensitivity in different types of early lens opacities.   Acta Ophthalmol Scand 74: 4. 379-383 Aug  
Abstract: The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the relationship of various types of early lens opacities with contrast sensitivity at different spatial frequencies. The Lens Opacities Classification System II and Lensmeter 701 were used in the grading of the lens status. The contrast sensitivity was tested with the Vistech VCTS 6500 distance test with optimal correction of refractive errors. Data from 995 eyes were available for the present study. Contrast sensitivity decreased by increasing lens opacification graded with the Lens Opacities Classification System II and also by increasing Lensmeter 701 reading. When the statistical model was adjusted for age and best corrected visual acuity, nuclear opacities and nuclear colour were not associated with decreased contrast sensitivity, however, there was a weak, but statistically significant correlation between contrast sensitivity reduction and cortical opacities at high spatial frequencies, and between contrast sensitivity and posterior subcapsular opacities at low and medium spatial frequencies.
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1995
 
PMID 
A M Turpeinen, G Alfthan, L Valsta, E Hietanen, J T Salonen, H Schunk, K Nyyssönen, M Mutanen (1995)  Plasma and lipoprotein lipid peroxidation in humans on sunflower and rapeseed oil diets.   Lipids 30: 6. 485-492 Jun  
Abstract: The effects of natural mixed diets on lipid peroxidation were investigated in humans. In the first study, 59 subjects were fed a rapeseed oil-based diet rich in monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) and a sunflower oil-based diet rich in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in a cross-over manner for three and a half weeks. The lipid peroxidation products in plasma were determined by measuring conjugated dienes and malondialdehyde (MDA). In a second study, plasma thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), lipid hydroperoxides, and the susceptibility of very low density lipoprotein+low-density lipoprotein (LDL) to in vitro oxidation were measured from subjects fed similar MUFA and PUFA diets for six weeks diets. No significant differences in plasma MDA or conjugated diene concentrations were found after the rapeseed oil diet or the sunflower oil diet in Study 1. In the second study, a small but significant decrease (P < 0.05) in both lipid hydroperoxides and TBARS was observed in the LDL fraction after the sunflower oil diet. The in vitro oxidation gave opposite results, showing increased oxidation after the sunflower oil diet. Despite a high intake of alpha-tocopherol during the oil periods, no increase in plasma alpha-tocopherol was noticed in either study. The results suggest that moderate changes in the fatty acid composition in the Western-type diet may be adequate to affect lipoprotein susceptibility to oxidation in vitro, but there is considerable disparity with some indices of in vivo lipid peroxidation.
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PMID 
T W Wilson, R D Cohen, P A Lachenbruch, M Wu, G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1995)  Is the relationship between supine blood pressure and postural changes in blood pressure artefactual? Results from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   J Hypertens 13: 4. 421-426 Apr  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether there is an association between initial supine blood pressure and postural changes in blood pressure (standing minus supine blood pressure). METHODS: Using data from the Kuopio (Finland) Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD), we simulated the problem and found the suggested solution based on the work of Blomqvist. We then applied the Blomqvist correction to the KIHD data with real measurement errors. RESULTS: The observed regression slope was substantially reduced, indicating that there is no relationship between the initial blood pressure and the postural change in blood pressure. CONCLUSION: Only the broad application of the method of Blomqvist to other data sets will determine the generalizability of the present finding that initial blood pressure is unrelated to the postural change in blood pressure.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Seppänen, K Nyyssönen, H Korpela, J Kauhanen, M Kantola, J Tuomilehto, H Esterbauer, F Tatzber, R Salonen (1995)  Intake of mercury from fish, lipid peroxidation, and the risk of myocardial infarction and coronary, cardiovascular, and any death in eastern Finnish men.   Circulation 91: 3. 645-655 Feb  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Even though previous studies have suggested an association between high fish intake and reduced coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality, men in Eastern Finland, who have a high fish intake, have an exceptionally high CHD mortality. We hypothesized that this paradox could be in part explained by high mercury content in fish. METHODS AND RESULTS: We studied the relation of the dietary intake of fish and mercury, as well as hair content and urinary excretion of mercury, to the risk of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and death from CHD, cardiovascular disease (CVD), and any cause in 1833 men aged 42 to 60 years who were free of clinical CHD, stroke, claudication, and cancer. Of these, 73 experienced an AMI in 2 to 7 years. Of the 78 decreased men, 18 died of CHD and 24 died of CVD. Men who had consumed local nonfatty fish species had elevated hair mercury contents. In Cox models with the major cardiovascular risk factors as covariates, dietary intakes of fish and mercury were associated with significantly increased risk of AMI and death from CHD, CVD, and any death. Men in the highest tertile (> or = 2.0 micrograms/g) of hair mercury content had a 2.0-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.2 to 3.1; P = .005) age- and CHD-adjusted risk of AMI and a 2.9-fold (95% CI, 1.2 to 6.6; P = .014) adjusted risk of cardiovascular death compared with those with a lower hair mercury content. In a nested case-control subsample, the 24-hour urinary mercury excretion had a significant (P = .042) independent association with the risk of AMI. Both the hair and urinary mercury associated significantly with titers of immune complexes containing oxidized LDL. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that a high intake of mercury from nonfatty freshwater fish and the consequent accumulation of mercury in the body are associated with an excess risk of AMI as well as death from CHD, CVD, and any cause in Eastern Finnish men and this increased risk may be due to the promotion of lipid peroxidation by mercury.
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PMID 
L K Niskanen, J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, M I Uusitupa (1995)  Plasma lipid peroxidation and hyperglycaemia: a connection through hyperinsulinaemia?   Diabet Med 12: 9. 802-808 Sep  
Abstract: Increased lipid peroxidation has been commonly observed in diabetic patients as compared to control subjects. However, studies on the relationship to metabolic control have yielded conflicting results and no data are available on the relationship of hyperinsulinaemia to lipid peroxidation. We investigated, in well-characterized groups of 93 patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, 22 subjects with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and 96 subjects with normal glucose tolerance (NGT), the determinants of plasma lipid peroxidation measured by plasma thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS). These were significantly higher in subjects with IGT (1.04 +/- 0.48 mumol I-1) and in NIDDM patients (1.00 +/- 0.48 mumol I-1) than in those with NGT (0.75 +/- 0.46 mumol I-1; p < 0.05). The glucose tolerance status was the major determinant of increased lipid peroxidation even after controlling for the effects of age, sex, body mass index, physical activity, use of alcohol, smoking, and the use of diuretics. In regression analyses the major determinants of plasma TBARS were fasting plasma glucose, insulin, and apolipoprotein A1 (inversely) levels. To conclude, plasma TBARS were increased in impaired glucose tolerance and in diabetes and they were related to prevailing plasma glucose and insulin levels, suggesting a role for insulin resistance in increased lipid peroxidation process. On the contrary, apolipoprotein A1 may have protective effects in this respect.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, H Korpela, K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala, T P Tuomainen, J D Belcher, D R Jacobs, R Salonen (1995)  Lowering of body iron stores by blood letting and oxidation resistance of serum lipoproteins: a randomized cross-over trial in male smokers.   J Intern Med 237: 2. 161-168 Feb  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the reduction of body iron stores by venesection (blood letting) would reduce the susceptibility to oxidation of atherogenic serum lipoproteins. DESIGN. This is a randomized, controlled cross-over trial in 14 regularly smoking men with elevated serum ferritin concentration. The study design comprised two 14-week study periods, with a 14-week wash-out period in between, with either blood donations or control. SETTING. The study site was the Research Institute of Public Health, University of Kuopio. Investigators from the Division of Epidemiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, participated in the planning of the study. SUBJECTS. Fourteen volunteers who were heavy smokers and had previous experience in blood letting were recruited for the study. INTERVENTIONS. During the intervention periods, the subjects donated 450 mg (500 mL) of blood three times in 14 weeks. MAIN OUTCOME MEASUREMENTS. Oxidation resistance of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL)/low density lipoprotein (LDL) was measured after inducing oxidation with haemin and H2O2. RESULTS. Serum ferritin concentration was reduced by 44% [95% confidence interval (CI) 8-82%, P = 0.021] during the venesection periods, the maximal oxidation velocity was decreased by 20% (95% CI 3-30%, P = 0.032), and the lag time to start of oxidation was lengthened (oxidation resistance increased) by 33% (95% CI 1-64%, P = 0.036). CONCLUSIONS. These observations indicate that the reduction of body iron stores by venesection can increase the oxidation resistance of serum VLDL/LDL in regularly smoking men.
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PMID 
R Salonen, K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala, J Rummukainen, R Belder, J S Park, J T Salonen (1995)  Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (KAPS). A population-based primary preventive trial of the effect of LDL lowering on atherosclerotic progression in carotid and femoral arteries.   Circulation 92: 7. 1758-1764 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The atherosclerotic progression-reducing effect of LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) lowering has been established in subjects with severe atherosclerotic disease but not in persons with elevated LDL cholesterols without severe atherosclerosis. KAPS (Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study) is the first population-based trial in the primary prevention of carotid and femoral atherosclerosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: The eligibility requirements were serum LDL-C > or = 4.0 mmol/L and total cholesterol < 7.5 mmol/L. Out of a geographically defined population, 447 men aged 44 to 65 years (mean, 57) were randomized to pravastatin (40 mg/d) or placebo for 3 years. Less than 10% of the subjects had prior myocardial infarction. Thirty-nine men discontinued study medication; however, efficacy data were available for 424 men. The primary outcome was the rate of carotid atherosclerotic progression, measured as the linear slope over annual ultrasound examinations in the average of the maximum carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) of the far wall of up to four arterial segments (the right and left distal common carotid artery and the right and left carotid bulb). For the carotid arteries, at the overall mean baseline IMT of 1.66 mm, the rate of progression of carotid atherosclerosis was 45% (95% CI, 16 to 69%) less in the pravastatin (0.017 mm/y) than the placebo (0.031 mm/y) group (P = .005). In the common carotid artery there was a treatment effect of 66% (95% CI, 30 to 95%; pravastatin 0.010 mm/y; placebo 0.029 mm/y; P < .002) at the overall mean baseline IMT of 1.35 mm. A treatment effect of 30% (95% CI, -1% to 54%) was found for the carotid bulb (pravastatin, 0.028; placebo, 0.040; P = .056) at the overall mean baseline IMT of 2.0 mm. The treatment effect was larger in subjects with higher baseline IMT values, in smokers and in those with low plasma vitamin E levels. There was no significant treatment effect on atherosclerotic progression in the femoral arteries. CONCLUSIONS: These data establish the antiatherogenic effect of LDL-C lowering by pravastatin in hypercholesterolemic men in a primary prevention setting and suggest a greater effect in smokers than in nonsmokers.
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PMID 
R Salonen, K Nyssönen, E Porkkala-Sarataho, J T Salonen (1995)  The Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (KAPS): effect of pravastatin treatment on lipids, oxidation resistance of lipoproteins, and atherosclerotic progression.   Am J Cardiol 76: 9. 34C-39C Sep  
Abstract: The Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study is the first population-based, double-blind trial in the primary prevention of carotid and femoral atherosclerosis. A total of 447 subjects with serum low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels > or = 155 mg/dl (> or = 4.0 mmol/liter) and total cholesterol levels < 290 mg/dl (< 7.5 mmol/liter) were randomly assigned to receive either pravastatin 40 mg/day or placebo for 3 years. Atherosclerotic progression in 424 men was assessed with B-mode ultrasonography. Pravastatin reduced the rate of progression by 45% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 16-69%, p = 0.005) in carotid arteries and by 66% (95% CI: 30-90%, p = 0.002) in the common carotid arteries. The treatment effect in the carotid arteries was greater in subjects with thick arterial walls at baseline, in smokers, and in subjects with low plasma alpha-tocopherol. Subjects who received pravastatin had a higher antioxidative capacity of LDL, a longer oxidation lag of very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) plus LDL, and a reduced oxidation rate of VLDL plus LDL in vitro. These data establish the antiatherogenic effect of lowering LDL cholesterol levels by pravastatin therapy in hypercholesterolemic men in a primary prevention setting and suggest that part of the antiatherogenic effect of pravastatin may be due to an improvement in the resistance of atherogenic lipoproteins to oxidation.
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PMID 
R P Byington, J W Jukema, J T Salonen, B Pitt, A V Bruschke, H Hoen, C D Furberg, G B Mancini (1995)  Reduction in cardiovascular events during pravastatin therapy. Pooled analysis of clinical events of the Pravastatin Atherosclerosis Intervention Program.   Circulation 92: 9. 2419-2425 Nov  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: It has been documented that the HMG coenzyme A reductase inhibitors, or statins, can decrease cardiovascular events and mortality in patients with clinical coronary disease and moderately to severely elevated lipid levels. Additional data are required to demonstrate a reduction of vascular events in coronary patients with less than severely elevated lipid levels and in subgroups of this population. METHODS AND RESULTS: Clinical data from four atherosclerosis regression trials that evaluated pravastatin were pooled for a predetermined analysis of the effect of that agent on the risk of coronary events. All trials were double-masked, placebo-controlled designs that used pravastatin as monotherapy for 2 to 3 years. The 1981 participants in the trials had evidence of atherosclerosis and mildly to moderately elevated lipid levels. For fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, there was a 62% reduction in events attributable to pravastatin (P = .001). This effect was evident in younger and older patients, men and women, and patients with and without histories of hypertension and prior infarction. There was a 46% reduction in all-cause mortality (P = .17), which, although not statistically significant, is consistent with the results of other statin trials. There also was a 62% reduction in the risk of fatal or nonfatal stroke (P = .054). CONCLUSIONS: These pooled results provide strong evidence that pravastatin reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with atherosclerotic disease and mildly to moderately elevated lipid levels. The benefit for reducing myocardial infarction is evident in older and younger patients, men and women, and patients with and without histories of hypertension and prior infarction.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, T P Tuomainen, P H Mäenpää, H Korpela, G A Kaplan, J Lynch, S P Helmrich, R Salonen (1995)  Increased risk of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus at low plasma vitamin E concentrations: a four year follow up study in men.   BMJ 311: 7013. 1124-1127 Oct  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE--To investigate whether low vitamin E status is a risk factor for incident non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. DESIGN--Population based follow up study with diabetes assessed at baseline and at four years. SETTING--Eastern Finland. SUBJECTS--Random sample of 944 men aged 42-60 who had no diabetes at the baseline examination. INTERVENTION--Oral glucose tolerance test at four year follow up. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--A man was defined diabetic if he had either (a) a fasting blood glucose concentration > or = 6.7 mmol/l, or (b) a blood glucose concentration > or = 10.0 mmol/l two hours after a glucose load, or (c) a clinical diagnosis of diabetes with either dietary, oral, or insulin treatment. RESULTS--45 men developed diabetes during the follow up period. In a multivariate logistic regression model including the strongest predictors of diabetes, a low lipid standardised plasma vitamin E (below median) concentration was associated with a 3.9-fold (95% confidence interval 1.8-fold to 8.6-fold) risk of incident diabetes. A decrement of 1 mumol/l of uncategorised unstandardised vitamin E concentration was associated with an increment of 22% in the risk of diabetes when allowing for the strongest other risk factors as well as serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations. CONCLUSIONS--There was a strong independent association between low vitamin E status before follow up and an excess risk of diabetes at four years. This supports the theory that free radical stress has a role in the causation of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus.
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PMID 
J Lynch, G A Kaplan, R Salonen, R D Cohen, J T Salonen (1995)  Socioeconomic status and carotid atherosclerosis.   Circulation 92: 7. 1786-1792 Oct  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: There is a consistent body of evidence that socioeconomic status (SES) is importantly associated with cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. However, little information currently exists on the relationship between SES and early manifestations of atherosclerotic vascular disease. METHODS AND RESULTS: We investigated the association between education, income, and occupation and intima-media thickness (IMT) in a population-based sample of eastern Finnish men. Data from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were used to estimate mean IMT across levels of SES in 1140 men. The association between SES and IMT was examined in relation to atherosclerotic risk factors and was also stratified by degree of atherosclerotic progression and was also stratified by degree of atherosclerotic progression and prevalent cardiovascular disease. There were significant, inverse, graded differences between levels of SES and IMT. For education, the age-adjusted mean IMTs for those with primary schooling or less, some high school, and completed high school or more were 0.96, 0.94, and 0.82 mm, respectively. The difference in mean IMT between the most extreme categories of education corresponds to a 15.4% increase in the risk of myocardial infarction. Similar patterns were found for each measure of SES, although the differences between the highest and lowest levels of SES were attenuated by adjustment for risk factors. In men who had no carotid stenosis or nonstenotic plaque and in men who had no indication of prevalent cardiovascular disease, a graded, inverse association between SES and IMT persisted, even after risk factor adjustment. CONCLUSIONS: These findings demonstrate a strong association between SES and atherosclerosis in an unselected population. The results show that this association was mediated by known atherosclerotic risk factors, was evident in the early stages of atherosclerosis, and was apparent in a healthy subgroup. Our findings suggest that the impact of SES is evident early in the natural history of atherosclerotic vascular disease.
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1994
 
PMID 
T A Lakka, J M Venäläinen, R Rauramaa, R Salonen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen (1994)  Relation of leisure-time physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness to the risk of acute myocardial infarction.   N Engl J Med 330: 22. 1549-1554 Jun  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. Previous studies have suggested that higher levels of regular physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness are associated with a reduced risk of coronary heart disease. We investigated the independent associations of physical activity during leisure time and maximal oxygen uptake (a measure of cardiorespiratory fitness) with the risk of acute myocardial infarction. METHODS. During the period 1984 to 1989, we performed base-line examinations in 1453 men 42 to 60 years old who did not report having cardiovascular disease or cancer. Physical activity was assessed quantitatively with a detailed questionnaire, and maximal oxygen uptake was measured directly by exercise testing. During an average follow-up of 4.9 years, 42 of the 1166 men with normal electrocardiograms at base line had a first acute myocardial infarction. RESULTS. After adjustment for age and the year of examination, the relative hazard (risk) of myocardial infarction in the third of subjects with the highest level of physical activity (> 2.2 hours per week) was 0.31 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.12 to 0.85; P = 0.02), as compared with the third with the lowest level (P = 0.04 for linear trend over all three groups). The relative hazard in the third with the highest maximal oxygen uptake (> 2.7 liters per minute) was 0.26 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.10 to 0.68; P = 0.006) (P = 0.006 for linear trend), after adjustment for age, the year and season when the examination was performed, weight, height, and the type of respiratory-gas analyzer used. After up to 17 confounding variables were controlled for, the relative hazards for the third of subjects with the highest level of physical activity (0.34; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.12 to 0.94; P = 0.04) and maximal oxygen uptake (0.35; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.13 to 0.92; P = 0.03), as compared with the values in the lowest third, were significantly (P < 0.05) less than 1.0. CONCLUSIONS. Higher levels of both leisure-time physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness had a strong, graded, inverse association with the risk of acute myocardial infarction, supporting the idea that lower levels of physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness are independent risk factors for coronary heart disease.
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DOI   
PMID 
U E Pallonen, L Leskinen, J O Prochaska, C J Willey, R Kääriäinen, J T Salonen (1994)  A 2-year self-help smoking cessation manual intervention among middle-aged Finnish men: an application of the transtheoretical model.   Prev Med 23: 4. 507-514 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. A 2-year self-help manual smoking cessation intervention was conducted among a panel of middle-aged Finnish men (n = 265) who were recruited proactively in a longitudinal cardiovascular risk factor surveillance study. METHODS. Intervention utilized the stages of change concept of the transtheoretical model. The stages were assessed in the treatment condition at baseline of the cessation study and after that by mail every sixth month. Assessments were followed by an immediate mailing of a stage-based self-help manual matching the stage of change at that time. A usual care group was assessed annually but received no treatment. RESULTS. A significant time x intervention effect (P < 0.05) and time x baseline stage effect (P < 0.001) on quit rates were observed in the panel data over the 2-year period. An analysis of changes in the stages of change also revealed an accelerated cessation process in the treatment condition. CONCLUSIONS. We conclude that mailed stage-matched self-help smoking cessation manuals were able to accelerate the smoking cessation process but manuals alone may not constitute a sufficient long-term intervention. The effects of differential exposure to intervention, subject characteristics, measurement reactivity, and secular trends are discussed as potential confounds.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1994)  Alexithymia may influence the diagnosis of coronary heart disease.   Psychosom Med 56: 3. 237-244 May/Jun  
Abstract: A number of psychosomatic studies have suggested that alexithymia, impairment in identifying and expressing inner feelings, might somehow affect the course of various illnesses. However, none of these studies have distinguished between an impact of alexithymia on actual pathophysiological change versus an impact only on illness behavior. In the present study, a population-based random sample of 2297 middle-aged men from Eastern Finland was evaluated for alexithymia using the Finnish version of the self-report Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS). Although high TAS scores were associated with prior diagnosis of coronary heart disease (CHD), they were not associated with greater prevalence of ischemia on an exercise tolerance test. The results of B-mode ultrasonography of the carotid artery for those who had a CHD diagnosis showed that carotid atherosclerosis actually decreased significantly as alexithymia increased. An interaction analysis indicated that alexithymia was related to increased probability of being diagnosed with CHD only among those who had mildly or moderately progressed carotid atherosclerosis, and not among those with the most severe progression. Alexithymia was associated with higher perceived exertion, and to some extent, with more self-reported symptoms during the exercise tolerance test. The findings support the hypothesis that alexithymia relates to increased symptom reporting rather than pathophysiological changes in CHD. The results also suggest that alexithymic men may get diagnosed earlier, perhaps because of their different illness behavior.
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PMID 
T Joensuu, R Salonen, I Winblad, H Korpela, J T Salonen (1994)  Determinants of femoral and carotid artery atherosclerosis.   J Intern Med 236: 1. 79-84 Jul  
Abstract: OBJECTIVES. The aim of the study was to find the most important determinants of early atherosclerosis in the carotid and femoral arteries. DESIGN. Carotid and femoral maximal intima media thickness (IMT) was measured 19 months after the first of 4 risk factor measurements. SETTING. Department of Community Health and General Practice, University of Kuopio, and Occupational Health Care in Pyhäsalmi Mine, Finland. SUBJECTS. The subjects comprised 60 male volunteers aged from 32 to 65 years from amongst 277 workers at the Pyhäsalmi Mine, Finland. Subjects were invited for an ultrasound examination, in order of serum total cholesterol content, until the required figure of 60 cases was achieved. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES. Carotid and femoral maximal intima media thickness. RESULTS. Systolic blood pressure (P < 0.01), serum total cholesterol (P < 0.01), age (P = 0.01) and pack-years smoked (P = 0.02) were independent determinants of maximal carotid artery IMT, and total cholesterol (P = 0.01), age (P = 0.03) and pack-years smoked (P = 0.01) for maximal femoral artery IMT. For the latter, plasma fibrinogen concentration (P = 0.10) was the next factor to enter the multiple regression model. Body mass index, heart rate, serum HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, urate, apolipoprotein A1, antithrombin III, lipid peroxides, vitamin E and plasma vitamin C had no significant association with either maximal carotid or femoral IMT or the mean of the carotid and femoral IMT. CONCLUSIONS. Systolic blood pressure, serum total cholesterol, age and pack-years smoked are the most important determinants of early atherosclerosis in the carotid artery and total cholesterol, age and pack-years smoked in the femoral artery. Prevention should take into consideration these findings. The role of plasma fibrinogen and oxidized low density lipoprotein would require re-evaluation in larger populations studied longitudinally.
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PMID 
J Pekkanen, A Nissinen, E Vartiainen, J T Salonen, S Punsar, M J Karvonen (1994)  Changes in serum cholesterol level and mortality: a 30-year follow-up. The Finnish cohorts of the seven countries study.   Am J Epidemiol 139: 2. 155-165 Jan  
Abstract: The association of past changes in serum cholesterol level with cause-specific mortality between 1974 and 1989 was examined in a cohort of 784 Finnish men aged 55-74 years who were free of symptomatic coronary heart disease in 1974. Changes in serum cholesterol level were computed based on measurements made in 1959, 1964, 1969, and 1974. Of the 405 deaths, 202 were due to cardiovascular diseases and 107 due to cancer. Men with a decline in serum cholesterol level between 1959 and 1974 also experienced greater than average declines in body mass index and tended to be more often current smokers in 1974. Among 339 men aged 65-74 years in 1974, men in the lowest tertile of serum cholesterol change, i.e., with greatest declines, had increased cardiovascular (hazard ratio, 1.58; 95% confidence interval 1.00-2.50) and all-cause (hazard ratio, 1.46; 95% confidence interval 1.06-2.02) mortality compared with men in the middle tertile of change, i.e., with least change, in multivariate analysis. Among 445 men aged 55-64 years in 1974, there was a significant U-shaped association between change in serum cholesterol level and coronary and all-cause mortality risk. The authors suggest that both the decline in serum cholesterol level and the associated high mortality may be caused by a third factor, such as increased prevalence of chronic diseases or other changes associated with aging. This would help to explain why several studies have not found an association of serum cholesterol with coronary risk among the elderly.
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PMID 
J W Lynch, G A Kaplan, R D Cohen, J Kauhanen, T W Wilson, N L Smith, J T Salonen (1994)  Childhood and adult socioeconomic status as predictors of mortality in Finland.   Lancet 343: 8896. 524-527 Feb  
Abstract: Research has suggested that social-class differences in adult health may be at least partly determined by conditions earlier in life. In 2636 Finnish men, we assessed impact of childhood and adult socioeconomic conditions on adult mortality risk by examining whether differing socioeconomic life-courses from early childhood to adulthood were associated with different risks of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Compared with high-income adults, those with low income had increased relative risks of all-cause (2.54, 95% CI 1.83-3.53) and cardiovascular (2.37, 1.51-3.7) mortality, but these increased risks were not related in either adult group to childhood socioeconomic conditions. Men who went from low-income childhood to high-income adulthood had the same mortality risks as those whose socioeconomic circumstances were good in both childhood and adulthood (1.14, 0.56-2.31, all causes; 0.99, 0.39-2.51, cardiovascular). By contrast, men who experienced poor socioeconomic circumstances as both children and adults were about twice as likely to die as those whose position improved (2.39, 1.28-4.44, all causes; 2.02, 0.9-4.54, cardiovascular). Our findings suggest that socioeconomic conditions in childhood are not important determinants of adult health. We caution against this interpretation--a life-course approach to socioeconomic differences in adult health requires understanding of the social and economic context in which individual life-courses are determined.
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PMID 
G Alfthan, J Pekkanen, M Jauhiainen, J Pitkäniemi, M Karvonen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, C Ehnholm (1994)  Relation of serum homocysteine and lipoprotein(a) concentrations to atherosclerotic disease in a prospective Finnish population based study.   Atherosclerosis 106: 1. 9-19 Mar  
Abstract: The relation of serum total homocysteine and lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) with the incidence of atherosclerotic disease was investigated among 7424 men and women aged 40-64 years free of atherosclerotic disease at baseline in 1977. During the 9-year follow-up, 134 male and 131 female cases with either myocardial infarction or stroke were identified. For each case a control subject was selected belonging to the same sex and 5-year age group. Serum samples collected in 1977 were stored at -20 degrees C and analyzed in 1991. The mean serum homocysteine concentration of male cases and controls was 9.99 mumol/l and 9.82 mumol/l at baseline and that of female cases and controls 9.58 mumol/l and 9.24 mumol/l, respectively. The median serum Lp(a) concentration of male cases and controls was 73 mg/l and 108 mg/l and that of female cases and controls 113 mg/l and 91 mg/l, respectively. The differences between cases and controls were not statistically significant. There was also no significant association between either homocysteine or Lp(a) and atherosclerotic disease, myocardial infarction or stroke in logistic regression analyses. The odds ratios varied from 1.00 to 1.26 for homocysteine and from 0.81 to 1.06 for Lp(a). The results of this prospective population-based study do not support the hypotheses that serum homocysteine or Lp(a) are risk factors for atherosclerotic disease. The lack of association between serum homocysteine and atherosclerotic disease may be due to the exceptionally low gene frequency predisposing to homocysteinemia in Finland.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1994)  Higher levels of conditioning leisure time physical activity are associated with reduced levels of stored iron in Finnish men.   Am J Epidemiol 140: 2. 148-160 Jul  
Abstract: The authors investigated the association of the amount and intensity of conditioning leisure time physical activity with serum ferritin and blood hemoglobin concentrations in 1,743 eastern Finnish men who were aged 42-60 years during the period 1984-1989. The duration and frequency of physical activity were associated inversely with serum ferritin (p = 0.003 for duration and p < 0.001 for frequency) and blood hemoglobin (p = 0.002 for duration and p = 0.019 for frequency) in multivariate regression models, after adjustment for major confounders. Men in the highest quartile of duration (> 2.6 hours/week) had a 16.8% lower mean serum ferritin concentration and men in the highest category of frequency (> 3 sessions/week) had a 19.9% lower mean serum ferritin concentration than men with a low duration (< 0.4 hour/week) and frequency (< 1 session/week), respectively. For blood hemoglobin, the respective differences were 1.3% and 1.0%. The intensity of physical activity was significantly associated only with blood hemoglobin (p = 0.011). Together with the authors' previous finding concerning the association between high serum ferritin and an excess risk of acute myocardial infarction, these data suggest that a reduction in stored iron levels could be one mechanism through which conditioning leisure time physical activity decreases the risk of coronary heart disease.
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PMID 
R Salonen, M Tervahauta, J T Salonen, J Pekkanen, A Nissinen, M J Karvonen (1994)  Ultrasonographic manifestations of common carotid atherosclerosis in elderly eastern Finnish men. Prevalence and associations with cardiovascular diseases and risk factors.   Arterioscler Thromb 14: 10. 1631-1640 Oct  
Abstract: We investigated the prevalence and associations with cardiovascular symptoms, signs, and risk factors of common carotid atherosclerosis using B-mode ultrasonography in a population sample of 182 eastern Finnish men aged 70 to 89 years. Men were examined in 1989 as a part of the 30-year follow-up examination of the eastern Finnish cohort of the Seven Countries Study. The mean maximal intima-media thickness (IMT) of the right and left common carotid arteries was 1.5 mm (range, 0.7 to 5.3 mm; standard deviation, 0.7 mm). Fifty-one percent of the subjects had nonmineralized atheroma and 91% had single or multiple mineralizations in any of the arterial segments imaged. Both mean maximal IMT and nonmineralized atheromas were associated significantly (P < .05) with the presence of cerebral atherosclerosis, carotid murmur, at least one nonpalpable peripheral arterial pulse, ischemic resting electrocardiographic abnormalities, and history of coronary heart disease but not with intermittent claudication at the 30-year follow-up. No significant associations were found between carotid mineralizations and clinical cardiovascular disease. Long-term elevations of serum cholesterol and long-term smoking, measured as the number of risk factor elevations in the six examinations, were associated with the presence of nonmineralized atheroma in the elderly (in 1989). Smoking and repeatedly detected hypertension, on the other hand, had an association with the presence of mineralizations in 1989.
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PMID 
J Julkunen, R Salonen, G A Kaplan, M A Chesney, J T Salonen (1994)  Hostility and the progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Psychosom Med 56: 6. 519-525 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: We studied prospectively the association of hostility and anger suppression by the use of ultrasonographically assessed 2-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis (PCA) in a sample of 119 middle-aged men from eastern Finland. Based on measures of cynical distrust, impatience-irritability, anger-in, and anger-control, four variants of hostility-by-anger suppression model were tested with multiple regression analysis. In addition to the previously established risk factors (i.e., serum low-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration, smoking, and old age), cynical distrust and anger-control significantly predicted PCA. There was about a two-fold accelerated PCA in the group with high cynical distrust and high anger-control even after we controlled for the established biological risk factors and possible confounding background variables. The impact of the independent variables on PCA seemed to be additive rather than synergistic. These results, based on a relatively small, but nonselected population sample, extend previous results of angiographic studies.
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PMID 
G A Kaplan, T W Wilson, R D Cohen, J Kauhanen, M Wu, J T Salonen (1994)  Social functioning and overall mortality: prospective evidence from the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Epidemiology 5: 5. 495-500 Sep  
Abstract: We studied the associations between 11 scales of social functioning and risk of death over an average follow-up time of 71 months in 42- to 60-year-old men in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. In age-adjusted analyses, men were at increased risk of death if they reported few persons to whom they gave or received social support, nonparticipation in organizations, low quality of social relationships, a small number of friends, or not currently being married. Frequency of interaction, shyness, and use of emotional support when troubled were not associated with risk of death; the use of instrumental support when troubled was associated with increased risk. There was little evidence of confounding of these associations by the presence of 31 chronic or acute conditions, perceived health status, or six risk factors. Consistent associations were found in a healthy subgroup. These data add to the growing body of literature linking mortality risk with social functioning, especially in relation to organizational participation and quality of relationships.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, E Porkkala, R Salonen, H Korpela, J T Salonen (1994)  Increase in oxidation resistance of atherogenic serum lipoproteins following antioxidant supplementation: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled clinical trial.   Eur J Clin Nutr 48: 9. 633-642 Sep  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To test the effect of supplementation of diet with ascorbic acid, selenium, alpha-tocopherol and beta-carotene on the oxidation resistance of very low (VLDL) + low density lipoprotein (LDL). DESIGN: A randomized placebo-controlled double-masked clinical trial. SETTING: In healthy men aged 30-58 years smoking regularly 15-40 cigarettes/day. SUBJECTS: Forty subjects recruited from the general population, who all completed the study. INTERVENTION: 400 mg of slow release ascorbic acid, 100 micrograms of organic selenium, 200 mg of D-alpha-tocopheryl acetate and 30 mg of beta-carotene daily or placebo, 20 men in each group for 3 months. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The oxidation resistance of VLDL + LDL measured by inducing oxidation with copper chloride and, separately, with a combination of haemin and H2O2. RESULTS: In plasma, alpha-tocopherol increased by 72%, beta-carotene by 209%, ascorbate by 45% and selenium by 20% in the supplemented men. The lag time to oxidation increased by 27% [95% confidence interval (CI) 18-35%, P < 0.001] after copper and by 29% (95% CI 12-46%, P = 0.002) after haemin plus H2O2 in the supplemented group as compared to the placebo group by t-tests. The respective net changes in the maximal oxidation velocity were a reduction of 10% (95% CI 1-21%, P = 0.037) after copper and a reduction of 15% (95% CI-1 to 30%, P = 0.070) after haemin and H2O2. CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide further confirmation for the notion that the supplementation of diet with antioxidative vitamins and selenium increases the oxidation resistance of atherogenic lipoproteins in human plasma.
Notes:
1993
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen (1993)  Ultrasound B-mode imaging in observational studies of atherosclerotic progression.   Circulation 87: 3 Suppl. II56-II65 Mar  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. Investigations of the progression of atherosclerosis in human arteries suggest that changes in the thickness of the arterial intima-media complex, observable with B-mode ultrasonography, may precede development of atherosclerotic lesions. For epidemiological studies and clinical trials, B-mode ultrasound has the advantage that it is noninvasive, can be used in nonsymptomatic subjects, and can be carried out repeatedly, thus reducing the necessary sample size. In the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study, we have assessed the reliability of B-mode ultrasound through studying intraobserver and interobserver variability. We have also investigated its predictive value by associating ultrasound observations with clinical end points, risk factors for common carotid and femoral atherosclerosis, and predictors of progression of common carotid atherosclerosis. METHODS AND RESULTS. The study of B-mode ultrasound reliability was conducted in 10 middle-aged men, with initial and two repeat scannings. The between-observer coefficient of variation was 10.5% for the first assessments by four observers. The intraobserver variability, described as the mean of the absolute difference between the first and third observations, was 0.087 mm, or 8.3% of the mean intimal-medial thickness (IMT). Ultrasonographic assessment of 1,257 men was compared with diagnostic information obtained from a prospective registry for acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The presence of any atherosclerotic findings was associated with a 3.0-fold risk of AMI. For each 0.1 mm of common carotid IMT, AMI risk increased by 11% (p < 0.001). Common carotid artery and femoral artery atherosclerosis, as assessed by mean maximal IMT, had different risk factor profiles. Age, serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking, platelet aggregability, serum copper, serum selenium (inversely), and blood hemoglobin were the strongest predictors of 2-year increase of common carotid IMT. CONCLUSIONS. On the basis of our experience and findings, the ultrasonographic assessment of common carotid atherosclerosis appears to be a feasible, reliable, valid, and cost-effective method for both population studies and clinical trials of atherosclerosis progression and regression.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, R Salonen, H Rouhiainen, J T Salonen (1993)  Association of corneal arcus with ultrasonographically assessed arterial wall thickness and serum lipids.   Cornea 12: 2. 142-145 Mar  
Abstract: Ophthalmological examination was made for 447 hypercholesterolemic middle-aged Eastern Finnish men participating in the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (KAPS) in order to evaluate the prevalence of corneal arcus, its risk factors, and possible association with atherosclerosis. The degree of atherosclerosis was assessed by ultrasonographic examination of carotid and femoral arteries. Corneal arcus in either eye was observed in 51.4% of the participants. Old age and high LDL cholesterol concentration were associated with the presence of corneal arcus. Corneal arcus had a close relationship with ultrasonographically assessed atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
T W Wilson, G A Kaplan, J Kauhanen, R D Cohen, M Wu, R Salonen, J T Salonen (1993)  Association between plasma fibrinogen concentration and five socioeconomic indices in the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Am J Epidemiol 137: 3. 292-300 Feb  
Abstract: The association between five socioeconomic indices (lifetime occupation, education, income, ownership of material possessions, and childhood socioeconomic status) and plasma fibrinogen levels was investigated in middle-aged Finnish men who were part of the Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. The Kuopio Ischemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study is based on a representative age-stratified sample of 2,682 men aged 42, 48, 54, and 60 years. The data were collected between 1984 and 1989. The present analysis is restricted to the 2,011 men for whom information on fibrinogen and all covariates was available. The covariates were alcohol consumption, body mass index, physical fitness, smoking, coffee consumption, high density lipoprotein cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, blood leukocyte count, and prevalent disease (at least one sign of ischemic heart disease, hypertension, diabetes, or previous stroke). An age-adjusted inverse association was found between levels of plasma fibrinogen and four of the five socioeconomic indices: current income, education, lifetime occupation status, and current material possessions. After adjustment for the covariates, the association persisted for education, current income, and lifetime occupation. Analysis of the joint effect of childhood and adult socioeconomic status indicated that those who were economically disadvantaged at both times had the highest fibrinogen levels, but the fibrinogen levels of those who were not poor as adults had no variation by childhood socioeconomic status.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, K Seppänen, J T Salonen (1993)  High-performance liquid chromatographic assay of platelet-produced thromboxane B2.   J Chromatogr 612: 1. 27-32 Jan  
Abstract: A method for the routine determination of platelet-produced thromboxane B2 (TXB2) from human serum is presented. To induce the secretion of thromboxane A2 from the platelets, blood is kept at 37 degrees C for 30 min before serum is separated. Serum is prepurified through small reversed-phase columns and TXB2 is analysed by reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. A column-switching technique is used to remove the interfering compounds present in serum. The detection limit with standard solution is 30 ng per injection. The method was applied to the measurement of platelet-produced TXB2 serum from 1040 men. The mean TXB2 was 247 +/- 134 ng/ml in the serum of men who had not used prostaglandin inhibitors, and 208 +/- 123 ng/ml in the serum of men who had used a prostaglandin inhibitor during a two-week period before blood sampling.
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PMID 
E S Sarkkinen, M I Uusitupa, K Nyyssönen, M Parviainen, I Penttilä, J T Salonen (1993)  Effects of two low-fat diets, high and low in polyunsaturated fatty acids, on plasma lipid peroxides and serum vitamin E levels in free-living hypercholesterolaemic men.   Eur J Clin Nutr 47: 9. 623-630 Sep  
Abstract: Diet enriched with polyunsaturated fat may increase the susceptibility of LDL to oxidation. Therefore the effects of two low-fat diets on plasma lipid peroxides in free-living mildly hypercholesterolaemic men (n = 37) were investigated in a randomized single-blind 28-week study. Composition of the diets were (1) American Heart Association (AHA) type 32/10:8:8 (indicating percentages of energy from total fat/saturated fat:monoenes:polyenes in actual diet); (2) low-fat 30/12:8:3. The subjects kept 3-day dietary records five times during the study to estimate the intake of nutrients. Plasma lipid peroxides were measured photometrically as the thiobarbituric-acid reactive substances (TBARS). Levels of serum vitamin E during the study were also determined. Mean change (+/- SD) in serum low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol was similar in both groups (-0.32 +/- 0.76 vs -0.32 +/- 0.87 mmol/l) (AHA type vs low-fat). Level of TBARS decreased (P < 0.05) during the AHA type diet (-8.4 +/- 37.1%) (mean +/- SD) and increased (P = 0.228) during the low-fat diet (+8.7 +/- 27.0%) from 0 to 6 months. The mean intake of total active tocopherols was greater (14.7 +/- 3.7 mg) during the AHA type diet compared to the low-fat diet (7.8 +/- 2.1 mg). Serum vitamin E to LDL cholesterol ratio increased from 8.9 +/- 2.9 to 9.6 +/- 2.4 nmol/mmol (0 vs 6 months) (P = 0.07) during the AHA type diet and from 8.6 +/- 2.6 to 9.3 +/- 2.4 nmol/mmol (P = 0.159) during the low-fat diet.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID 
A Nissinen, M Tervahauta, J Pekkanen, P Kivinen, J Stengård, E Kaarsalo, S L Kivelä, S Väisänen, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto (1993)  Prevalence and change of cardiovascular risk factors among men born 1900-19: the Finnish cohorts of the Seven Countries Study.   Age Ageing 22: 5. 365-376 Sep  
Abstract: In a 30-year follow-up survey of the Finnish cohorts of the Seven Countries Study in 1989, 470 men aged 70-89 years were examined in two rural areas of Finland, in the East and in the West. Life-style-related coronary heart disease risk factors were at high levels in both groups, but the difference between areas found in the same cohort in middle age had mostly disappeared or partially reversed. Mean levels of systolic/diastolic blood pressure, body mass index, fasting blood glucose, blood glucose after 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test, and plasma fibrinogen were higher in the West than in the East (p < or = 0.05), but serum thiocyanate which reflects smoking habits was higher in the East (p < 0.001). No significant differences between areas were found in mean levels of serum total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, triglycerides, apolipoprotein A-I, apolipoprotein B, lipoprotein (a), plasma coagulation factor VIIc, and prevalence of current smoking.
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PMID 
P Rouhiainen, H Rouhiainen, I L Notkola, J T Salonen (1993)  Comparison of the lens opacities classification system II and Lensmeter 701.   Am J Ophthalmol 116: 5. 617-621 Nov  
Abstract: We examined 447 hypercholesterolemic and 108 normocholesterolemic Eastern Finnish men, aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years, who were participating in the Kuopio Atherosclerosis Prevention Study. Two newly developed lenticular opacity grading methods, the Lens Opacities Classification System II and Lensmeter 701, were compared. There was fair agreement between the two grading methods for nuclear color and opalescence, but the agreement was weaker for cortical and posterior subcapsular opacities. The Lens Opacities Classification System II grading of nuclear opacities explained 48% (for the right eye) and 32% (for the left eye) of the variation of Lensmeter readings. Attributable fractions were lower for the other types of lens opacities.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, J T Salonen (1993)  Moderate to high intensity conditioning leisure time physical activity and high cardiorespiratory fitness are associated with reduced plasma fibrinogen in eastern Finnish men.   J Clin Epidemiol 46: 10. 1119-1127 Oct  
Abstract: A reduction of plasma fibrinogen has been suggested as one mechanism through which physical activity would protect against coronary heart disease (CHD). Therefore, we investigated the association of conditioning leisure time physical activity (CLTPA), assessed quantitatively by a 12-month history, and maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max) with plasma fibrinogen concentration in eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years. A high mean intensity of CLTPA (standardized multivariate regression coefficient beta -0.059, p = 0.020) and a high maximal oxygen uptake (beta -0.163, p < 0.001) were associated with reduced plasma fibrinogen when adjusting for the strongest covariates. The adjusted relative difference in plasma fibrinogen concentration was 6.6% between men with a mean CLTPA intensity of < 4 and > 8 METs and 9.1% between the extreme quartiles of VO2max (< 2.21 vs > 2.961/min). The association between the mean intensity of CLTPA (p = 0.030 for interaction) and VO2max (p = 0.033) and plasma fibrinogen was stronger for smokers than for non-smokers. These data indicate that a reduction of plasma fibrinogen concentration may be one mechanism through which moderate to high intensity CLTPA and high cardiorespiratory fitness reduce the risk of CHD.
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PMID 
V Kataja, S Syrjänen, M Yliskoski, M Hippelïnen, M Väyrynen, S Saarikoski, R Mäntyjärvi, V Jokela, J T Salonen, K Syrjänen (1993)  Risk factors associated with cervical human papillomavirus infections: a case-control study.   Am J Epidemiol 138: 9. 735-745 Nov  
Abstract: As a part of the long-term prospective follow-up study conducted for women with genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infections in Kuopio University Hospital, Finland, since 1981, a case-control study was designed to assess risk factors for genital HPV infections. The cases (n = 691) were women who had been invited to attend the follow-up program on the basis of an abnormal cervical smear consistent with HPV-induced cytopathic changes, i.e., had a clinical HPV infection. The controls (n = 706) were a randomly selected group of women who had normal smears in the screening. Both groups were asked to fill in an extensive questionnaire focusing on detailed epidemiologic data on previous gynecologic and obstetric history, sexual practices, sexual partners, and smoking habits. In the multivariate analysis, eight variables emerged as independent risk factors for prevalent HPV infection. These variables could explain over 80% of the risk for infection. The risk for the infection varied with age, being highest in the age group 20-29 years, thereafter declining in the following 10-year age groups. The strongest independent risk factor was the number of sexual partners during the past 2 years (adjusted odds ratio = 12.1; 95% confidence interval 4.3-33.8 for five or more vs. one or no partners). Among the independent risk factors that increased the risk were also current smoking (adjusted odds ratio = 2.7; 95% confidence interval 1.7-4.3), warts in sexual partner(s) (adjusted odds ratio = 3.2; 95% confidence interval 1.6-6.5), and increasing frequency of sexual intercourse per week. Independent risk factors with a protective effect included a normal result in the last Papanicolaou smear, regular use of an intrauterine device as a contraceptive method, and good personal hygiene. No significant association between oral contraceptive use and risk for HPV infection was found. Condom use did not result in protection from the infection. The results of this study support the concepts that sexual intercourse is the main form of transmission among adults and that sexual promiscuity is the most important determinant for genital HPV infections.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, G A Kaplan, J Julkunen, T W Wilson, J T Salonen (1993)  Social factors in alexithymia.   Compr Psychiatry 34: 5. 330-335 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: Social characteristics of alexithymic individuals were examined in a population-based study of 2,682 middle-aged men from Eastern Finland. Alexithymia, referring to difficulties in identifying and verbally describing inner feelings, was assessed using the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS). Men whose high TAS score suggested reduced ability in verbal emotional expression were more often unmarried and had low levels of social contacts and acquaintances. Education, income, and occupational status were inversely related to the TAS score. These associations remained statistically significant after adjustment for confounding factors. The results suggest that alexithymia could be viewed not only as a psychological phenomenon, but also partly as a socially determined one.
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1992
 
PMID 
T A Lakka, J T Salonen (1992)  Intra-person variability of various physical activity assessments in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Int J Epidemiol 21: 3. 467-472 Jun  
Abstract: We investigated the 12-month intra-person variability of various physical activity assessments used in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) in 51 men aged 54 years. The methods were a 24-hour total activity recording, a 12-month leisure time activity history, a 7-day leisure time activity recall and a habitual occupational activity interview. More leisure time activity was reported in the retest. Intra-person variability was high for all physical activity indices. The proportion of the mean absolute test-retest difference out of the test-retest mean was 18% for the 24-hour total activity recording, 45% for the 12-month leisure time activity history, 86% for the 7-day leisure time activity recall, 70% for kilometres of conditioning activity per week (No. = 51) and 22% for the occupational activity interview (No. = 39). However, respective intraclass correlations for these indices were 0.43, 0.58, 0.35, 0.71 and 0.69. The physical activity assessments differ in observed intra-person variability in accordance with the type of activity, time frame and the method of recall. Owing to its representative time frame and relatively small intra-person variability the 12-month history may be recommended for a standard instrument for population studies concerning leisure time activity.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, J Julkunen, J T Salonen (1992)  Coping with inner feelings and stress: heavy alcohol use in the context of alexithymia.   Behav Med 18: 3. 121-126  
Abstract: The authors conducted a population study to assess the relationship between heavy alcohol consumption and alexithymia, defined as difficulty in identifying and expressing feelings. The study sample consisted of 2,297 middle-aged men from eastern Finland. The proportion of men who reported either frequent intoxication or unpleasant aftereffects of heavy drinking increased linearly with alexithymia. Alexithymia and the heavy acute intake of different sorts of alcoholic drinks were also consistently associated. Long-term heavy use, taking into account both the dose and frequency, was also linearly related to the alexithymia measure. In multivariate models to assess whether high alcohol consumption in alexithymic individuals might relate to stress, the authors found nothing to support the stress-dampening hypothesis.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, S Ylä-Herttuala, R Yamamoto, S Butler, H Korpela, R Salonen, K Nyyssönen, W Palinski, J L Witztum (1992)  Autoantibody against oxidised LDL and progression of carotid atherosclerosis.   Lancet 339: 8798. 883-887 Apr  
Abstract: Oxidative modification of LDL renders it immunogenic and autoantibodies to epitopes of oxidised LDL, such as malondialdehyde (MDA)-lysine, are found in serum and recognise material in atheromatous tissue. However, there has been no prospective study to assess the importance of oxidised LDL among patients with vascular disease. We compared the titre of autoantibodies to MDA-modified LDL and native LDL in baseline serum samples of 30 eastern Finnish men with accelerated two-year progression of carotid atherosclerosis and 30 age-matched controls without progression. Neither group had specific antibody binding to native LDL. A titre was defined as a ratio of antibody binding to MDA-LDL/binding to native LDL. Cases had a significantly higher titre to MDA-LDL (2.67 vs 2.06, p = 0.003). Cases also had a greater proportion of smokers (37% vs 3%), higher LDL cholesterol (4.2 mmol/l vs 3.6 mmol/l), and higher serum copper concentration (1.14 mg/l vs 1.04 mg/l). Even after adjusting for these variables and the severity of baseline atherosclerosis, the difference in antibody titre remained significant in a multifactorial logistic model (p = 0.031). Thus, the titre of autoantibodies to MDA-LDL was an independent predictor of the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in these Finnish men. Our data provide further support for a role of oxidatively modified LDL in atherogenesis.
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PMID 
U E Pallonen, J L Fava, J T Salonen, J O Prochaska (1992)  Readiness for smoking change among middle-aged Finnish men.   Addict Behav 17: 5. 415-423 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: According to the transtheoretical model of change, smoking cessation attempts are preceded by three stages: precontemplation, contemplation, and preparation. These stages have shown great utility in predicting and impacting on behavior change. This cross-cultural study examined the distribution of the stages within a 33% random sample of middle-aged Finnish men. Of 490 regular smokers, 57.6% were in precontemplation, 29.4% in contemplation, and 13.0% in preparation. Five conceptual clusters were used to predict the stage membership. The number of lifetime quit attempts and the number of 24-h quit attempts in the past 12 months were found to be the best discriminators among the stages. The overall correct classification rate into stages using stepwise discriminant function analysis was 64.0%, substantially better than the chance rate. However, the analysis was successful for precontemplators only. Results showed that most smokers were precontemplators. Previous attempts to reduce smoking provided some predictive information concerning stage membership. Demographics, addiction to smoking, current smoking, smoking environment, and quit history were incomplete predictors of stage membership, as theoretically predicted.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, J Julkunen, J T Salonen (1992)  Validity and reliability of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) in a population study.   J Psychosom Res 36: 7. 687-694 Oct  
Abstract: Alexithymia refers to the difficulties an individual has to experience and express his feelings. Various self-report questionnaires have been introduced to measure alexithymia, but only a few rigorous validity studies of this concept have been carried out in nonclinical populations. The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) in a population sample of 1560 middle-aged men from eastern Finland. The modified version of the TAS applied in this study had a factor structure that matched the previous results and the theoretical concept of alexithymia. Internal consistency of the total TAS scale, as well as the 8 month retest reliability, were adequate. The TAS correlated fairly well with an interview-based evaluation of alexithymic features. The results suggest that the TAS could be a useful screening instrument for alexithymic features in a population study, but the scale would probably need some revisions.
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PMID 
T A Lakka, J T Salonen (1992)  Physical activity and serum lipids: a cross-sectional population study in eastern Finnish men.   Am J Epidemiol 136: 7. 806-818 Oct  
Abstract: The authors studied the association of the type, amount, and intensity of physical activity with serum lipids in 2,492 randomly selected eastern Finnish men aged 42-60 years during 1984-1989, controlling for the major confounding factors. High density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL cholesterol) and HDL2 cholesterol were associated positively and triglycerides inversely with total, occupational, and leisure time activity in a multivariate regression model (p < 0.001). HDL3 cholesterol was associated positively only with total activity (p < 0.001). The adjusted relative differences in HDL cholesterol, HDL2 cholesterol, HDL3 cholesterol, and triglycerides between extreme total (occupational, leisure time) activity quartiles were 10.7% (9.0%, 5.7%), 12.2% (10.3%, 9.5%), 5.9% (2.9%, 0%), and 22.7% (9.2%, 10.4%), respectively. HDL cholesterol and HDL2 cholesterol were the highest and triglycerides the lowest at a conditioning activity intensity of more than 6 metabolic units (p < 0.001). The strongest associations were found for the 24-Hour Recording, which suggests short-term effects of physical activity on serum lipids. The beneficial effects of physical activity on serum lipids appear to be mediated partially by a reduced serum insulin concentration and decreased body adiposity. These data provide further confirmation for the concept that both regular or at least moderate intensity leisure time activity and occupational physical activity have a favorable impact on serum lipids.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, K Nyyssönen, H Korpela, J Tuomilehto, R Seppänen, R Salonen (1992)  High stored iron levels are associated with excess risk of myocardial infarction in eastern Finnish men.   Circulation 86: 3. 803-811 Sep  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. Iron can induce lipid peroxidation in vitro and in vivo in humans and has promoted ischemic myocardial injury in experimental animals. We tested the hypothesis that high serum ferritin concentration and high dietary iron intake are associated with an excess risk of acute myocardial infarction. METHODS AND RESULTS. Randomly selected men (n = 1,931), aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years, who had no symptomatic coronary heart disease at entry, were examined in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD) in Eastern Finland between 1984 and 1989. Fifty-one of these men experienced an acute myocardial infarction during an average follow-up of 3 years. On the basis of a Cox proportional hazards model adjusting for age, examination year, cigarette pack-years, ischemic ECG in exercise test, maximal oxygen uptake, systolic blood pressure, blood glucose, serum copper, blood leukocyte count, and serum high density lipoprotein cholesterol, apolipoprotein B, and triglyceride concentrations, men with serum ferritin greater than or equal to 200 micrograms/l had a 2.2-fold (95% CI, 1.2-4.0; p less than 0.01) risk factor-adjusted risk of acute myocardial infarction compared with men with a lower serum ferritin. An elevated serum ferritin was a strong risk factor for acute myocardial infarction in all multivariate models. This association was stronger in men with serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration of 5.0 mmol/l (193 mg/dl) or more than in others. Also, dietary iron intake had a significant association with the disease risk in a Cox model with the same covariates. CONCLUSIONS. Our data suggest that a high stored iron level, as assessed by elevated serum ferritin concentration, is a risk factor for coronary heart disease.
Notes:
1991
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, R Bonita, A Stewart, A Nissinen, J T Salonen (1991)  Hypertension, cigarette smoking, and the decline in stroke incidence in eastern Finland.   Stroke 22: 1. 7-11 Jan  
Abstract: Finland has high rates of both cardiovascular disease and cardiovascular disease risk factors. We studied random samples of the population 30-59 years of age for risk factors in two provinces of eastern Finland in 1972 and 1977. We then followed both cohorts until 1985 through linkage with national hospital discharge and death certificate registers. The prevalence of hypertension and smoking in both provinces declined between 1972 and 1977, as did the stroke incidence in the 8-year period of follow-up of each cohort. We observed no differences in stroke incidence between the two provinces. The relative risk of stroke in the later period (1977-1985) was 0.71 and 0.58 for men and women, respectively, when compared with the earlier period (1972-1980). Overall, 28% of all stroke events could be attributed to hypertension, 17% to smoking, and 43% to these two factors jointly. The decrease in the prevalence of hypertension and smoking accounted for about 29% of the decline.
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PMID 
R Salonen, J T Salonen (1991)  Determinants of carotid intima-media thickness: a population-based ultrasonography study in eastern Finnish men.   J Intern Med 229: 3. 225-231 Mar  
Abstract: We investigated the determinants of maximal intima-media thickness of common carotid arteries in a population-based sample of 1224 Eastern Finnish men aged 42, 48, 54 or 60 years. A high-resolution B-mode ultrasonographic examination was performed as part of the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). The maximal intima-media thickness (IMT) varied between 0.48 mm and 4.09 mm (mean value +/- SD, 0.94 mm +/- 0.38 mm). Age (standardized partial coefficient, beta = 0.238, P less than 0.0001), ambulatory pulse pressure (beta = 0.130, P less than 0.0001), cigarette-years of smoking (beta = 0.125, P less than 0.0001), serum LDL cholesterol concentration (beta = 0.125, P less than 0.0001), history of ischaemic heart disease (beta = 0.125, P less than 0.0001), pre-exercise systolic blood pressure (beta = 0.070, P = 0.0113) and diabetes (beta = 0.068, P = 0.0072) were most strongly associated with IMT. This study confirms the role of systolic blood pressure, smoking and serum LDL cholesterol levels as major risk factors for increased carotid intima-media thickness.
Notes:
 
PMID 
R Salonen, A Haapanen, J T Salonen (1991)  Measurement of intima-media thickness of common carotid arteries with high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography: inter- and intra-observer variability.   Ultrasound Med Biol 17: 3. 225-230  
Abstract: High-resolution B-mode ultrasonography enables quantitative measurement of the thickness of the intima-media layer of superficial large arteries noninvasively. We investigated the inter- and intra-observer variability of this measurement in the common carotid arteries in 10 randomly selected men. The maximal right and left carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) was measured with calipers during the scanning from frozen images by four observers in a blinded fashion. Three observers also repeated the scanning and the measurements twice with a week's intervals, with no knowledge of the previous readings. The inter-observer coefficient of variation (CV) was 10.5%. The intra-observer CV (mean of right and left CCA) was 5.4-5.8% for the three observers who carried out the measurements three times. The mean absolute difference between the first and third measurement was 0.087 mm. The intra-observer variation accounted for only 4% of the total measurement variability, 96% being attributable to inter-observer variation. These data show that most of the measurement variability in ultrasonographic B-mode IMT measurements is due to differences between observers, whereas the within-observer variability over time appears proportionately very small.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, K Seppänen, M Kantola, S Suntioinen, H Korpela (1991)  Interactions of serum copper, selenium, and low density lipoprotein cholesterol in atherogenesis.   BMJ 302: 6779. 756-760 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE--To investigate the interactions between serum copper, selenium, and low density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations with regard to the progression of carotid atherosclerosis. DESIGN--Longitudinal study of a cohort of middle aged men followed up for 24 months. SETTING--Epidemiological survey of the population of seven communities in eastern Finland. SUBJECTS--126 men aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 at examination randomly selected from a population based sample of 2682 men. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Increase in maximal carotid intima media thickness. RESULTS--The mean increase in the maximal common carotid intima media thickness after two years was greater in men with high serum copper concentrations (0.16 mm compared with 0.08 mm in men with concentrations less than 17.6 mumol/l; p = 0.010), those with low serum selenium concentrations (0.15 mm compared with 0.09 mm in men with concentrations greater than or equal to 1.40 mumol/l; p = 0.035), and those with raised serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations (0.15 mm compared with 0.08 mm in men with concentrations less than 4.0 mmol/l; p = 0.032) after adjustment for age and cigarette pack years in a three way analysis of covariance. A raised serum low density lipoprotein concentration was associated with accelerated progression of atherosclerosis only in men with higher than median serum copper concentrations (net difference 0.22 mm; p less than 0.001 for two way interaction), and this synergism was even more pronounced in men with serum selenium concentrations below the median value (net difference 0.41 mm; p = 0.042 for three way interaction). CONCLUSION--These data provide evidence of a synergistic effect of copper (a pro-oxidant), a low serum concentration of selenium (a cofactor of an enzyme that scavenges free radicals), and low density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration in atherogenesis.
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PMID 
J Kauhanen, J Julkunen, J T Salonen (1991)  Alexithymia and perceived symptoms: criterion validity of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale.   Psychother Psychosom 56: 4. 247-252  
Abstract: The associations between alexithymia and somatization, perceived symptoms and subjective health, were investigated in a population sample of 2,297 middle-aged Finnish men. A modified translated version of the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS) was used to assess alexithymia. A graded and statistically significant relationship was observed between the TAS score for alexithymia and self-reported recent symptoms. The alexithymia score, adjusted for age, smoking and socioeconomic status, was also positively associated with the MMPI hypochondriasis index and inversely with perceived level of health. One of the factors of the TAS appeared to have a weak but significant correlation with a variety of diagnosed disorders that previously have been considered psychosomatic.
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PMID 
R Salonen, J T Salonen (1991)  Carotid atherosclerosis in relation to systolic and diastolic blood pressure: Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Ann Med 23: 1. 23-27 Feb  
Abstract: We investigated the association of systolic and diastolic blood pressure and hypertension with two different manifestations of carotid atherosclerosis in a random population sample of 1165 Eastern Finnish men aged 42, 48, 54 or 60 years, examined in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Carotid atherosclerosis was assessed with high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography. Men with a casual sitting systolic blood pressure of 175 mmHg or more had a 3.17-fold (95% confidence interval 1.79-5.61) prevalence of intima-media thickening--adjusted for age, smoking, S-LDL-cholesterol, IHD history and diabetes--compared to men with lower systolic pressures. The relative prevalence of carotid plaques in men with raised systolic pressures. The relative prevalence of carotid plaques in men with raised systolic blood pressure was 2.61 (95% confidence interval 1.44-4.72) in relation to men with no lesions. Our findings suggest that systolic but not diastolic hypertension is associated with an increased prevalence of both early and advanced atherosclerotic lesions in carotid arteries.
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PMID 
K Nyyssönen, J T Salonen (1991)  Comparison of gel permeation chromatography, density gradient ultracentrifugation and precipitation methods for quantitation of very-low-, low- and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol.   J Chromatogr 570: 2. 382-389 Oct  
Abstract: Human VLDL, LDL and HDL (very-low-, low-, and high-density lipoproteins) were isolated from plasma by gel permeation chromatography with one pre-ultracentrifugation step. The column effluent was monitored at 280 nm. The cholesterol content of the fractions correlated well with fractions from sequential ultracentrifugation (VLDL, r = 0.839; LDL, r = 0.924; HDL, r = 0.766) or precipitation (LDL, r = 0.975; HDL, r = 0.972) methods. The average triglyceride, phospholipid and protein compositions of the separated lipoprotein fractions were close to those of the ultracentrifugally isolated fractions reported previously. Apolipoproteins A1 and B were determined from fractions to confirm the right distribution between different lipoproteins.
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PMID 
J T Salonen (1991)  Prevention of coronary heart disease in Finland--application of the population strategy.   Ann Med 23: 6. 607-612 Dec  
Abstract: The North Karelia Project was the first population-based cardiovascular disease prevention programme. Even though it achieved, as compared to the reference population, a sizeable reduction in smoking and small effect in blood pressure and serum cholesterol levels, the effect on coronary and cardiovascular mortality of the programme remains equivocal. This is mainly due to shortcomings in the original study design and unanticipated start of the national decline in coronary mortality at the same time with the programme. North Karelia Project contributed, however, to the initiation of national activities in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. These have produced a favourable trend in lipids in the whole Finnish population. The recommendations and activities by national authorities and organizations have suffered, until recently, from orientation towards screening and individual risk factors. The success in North Karelia in early 1970's in the reduction of smoking has still not occurred nationally. Further emphasis is needed in the population approach and in the integration of preventive activities into the community and legislation.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, K Seppänen, S Rinta-Kiikka, M Kuukka, H Korpela, G Alfthan, M Kantola, W Schalch (1991)  Effects of antioxidant supplementation on platelet function: a randomized pair-matched, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial in men with low antioxidant status.   Am J Clin Nutr 53: 5. 1222-1229 May  
Abstract: We investigated the effect on platelet function of supplementing men with low antioxidant status with 600 mg ascorbic acid, 300 mg alpha-tocopherol, 27 mg beta-carotene, and 75 micrograms selenium in yeast daily. Eighty men were randomly assigned in pairs (matched for smoking, baseline antioxidant status, and time and day of entry) by use of a double-blind design to receive supplement or placebo for 5 mo. Compared with 39 control subjects, 39 antioxidant-supplemented men experienced the following net reductions during the double-blind period: 20% (P = 0.012) in serum lipid peroxides, 24% (P = 0.035) in ADP-induced platelet aggregation, 42% (P = 0.040) in the rate of ATP release during aggregation, 51% (P = 0.018) in serum (platelet-produced) thromboxane B2, and 29% (P = 0.024) in plasma beta-thromboglobulin concentration. The data support our hypothesis that antioxidant supplementation of men with low antioxidant status and high fat intake reduces lipid peroxidation, the capacity of platelets to aggregate and to produce thromboxane A2, and in vivo platelet activation.
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PMID 
J T Salonen (1991)  Dietary fats, antioxidants and blood pressure.   Ann Med 23: 3. 295-298 Aug  
Abstract: Although obesity and alcohol intake as well as dietary sodium, potassium and magnesium are the major non-genetic determinants of blood pressure levels, interest has recently been stimulated in the function of fatty acids and antioxidants in the aetiology of hypertension. In the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study both plasma ascorbic acid and serum selenium concentrations had a moderate, independent inverse association, estimated dietary intake of saturated fatty acids had a positive association and estimated dietary intake of linolenic acid had an inverse association with the mean resting blood pressure in 722 Eastern Finnish men with neither self reported hypertension nor cerebrovascular disease. Even though these cross sectional observations do not prove causality, they warrant clinical trials to verify or disprove that dietary fats and antioxidants are factors in the development of hypertension.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen (1991)  Ultrasonographically assessed carotid morphology and the risk of coronary heart disease.   Arterioscler Thromb 11: 5. 1245-1249 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: As ultrasonographically assessed carotid arteriosclerosis is being used as a surrogate measure for coronary arteriosclerosis, we performed a prospective longitudinal study of the association of our high-resolution ultrasound assessment of extracranial carotid morphology with the risk of acute coronary events in 1,288 eastern Finnish men. The presence of any structural changes in the common carotid arteries or carotid bulbs was associated with a 3.29-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.31-8.29; p = 0.0074), intimal-medial thickening with a 2.17-fold (95% confidence interval, 0.70-6.74; p = NS), small carotid plaques with a 4.15-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.51-11.47; p less than 0.01), and large ("stenotic") plaques with a 6.71-fold (95% confidence interval, 1.33-33.91; p less than 0.01) risk of acute myocardial infarction compared with men free of any structural changes in the carotid artery wall at baseline. These data confirm the close relation between carotid artery wall morphology and coronary heart disease.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, K Seppänen, R Rauramaa, J Tuomilehto (1991)  HDL, HDL2, and HDL3 subfractions, and the risk of acute myocardial infarction. A prospective population study in eastern Finnish men.   Circulation 84: 1. 129-139 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND. We investigated the association of cholesterol concentrations in serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) and its subfractions HDL2 and HDL3 with the risk of acute myocardial infarction in 1,799 randomly selected men 42, 48, 54, or 60 years old. METHODS AND RESULTS. Baseline examinations in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study were done during 1984-1987. In Cox multivariate survival models adjusted for age and examination year, serum HDL cholesterol of less than 1.09 mmol/l (42 mg/dl) was associated with a 3.3-fold risk of acute myocardial infarction (95% confidence intervals [CI], 1.7-6.4), serum HDL2, cholesterol of less than 0.65 mmol/l (25 mg/dl) was associated with a 4.0-fold risk of acute myocardial infarction (95% CI, 1.9-8.3), and serum HDL3 cholesterol of less than 0.40 mmol/l (15 mg/dl) was associated with a 2.0-fold (95% CI, 1.1-4.0) risk of acute myocardial infarction. Adjustments for obesity, ischemic heart disease, other cardiovascular disease, maximal oxygen uptake, systolic blood pressure, antihypertensive medication, serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride concentrations reduced the excess risks associated with serum HDL, HDL2, and HDL3 cholesterol in the lowest quartiles by 52%, 48%, and 41%, respectively. Additional adjustments for alcohol consumption, cigarettes smoked daily, smoking years, and leisure time energy expenditure reduced these excess risks associated with low HDL, HDL2, and HDL3 cholesterol levels by another 26%, 24% and 21%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS. Our data confirm that both total HDL and HDL2 levels have inverse associations with the risk of acute myocardial infarction and may thus be protective factors in ischemic heart disease, whereas the role of HDL3 remains equivocal.
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PMID 
M Laakso, H Sarlund, R Salonen, M Suhonen, K Pyörälä, J T Salonen, P Karhapää (1991)  Asymptomatic atherosclerosis and insulin resistance.   Arterioscler Thromb 11: 4. 1068-1076 Jul/Aug  
Abstract: High plasma insulin has been shown to be associated with the risk of coronary heart disease in nondiabetic subjects in prospective population studies. Furthermore, insulin resistance measured by the euglycemic glucose clamp technique has been shown to be related to lipid and lipoprotein changes favoring atherosclerosis and to high blood pressure. No study, however, has demonstrated that insulin resistance per se is directly associated with atherosclerosis. With this aim, we studied 30 middle-aged nonobese subjects with asymptomatic atherosclerosis in the femoral or carotid arteries and 13 corresponding control subjects. Fasting blood glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels were only slightly and nonsignificantly higher in subjects with atherosclerosis than in controls, and during the oral glucose tolerance test 1- and 2-hour glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels were similar in both groups. During the euglycemic hyperinsulinemic (1,200 pmol/l) clamp studies, subjects with atherosclerosis had a 20% reduced whole-body glucose uptake (58 +/- 2 versus 71 +/- 4 mumol/kg/min, p = 0.004). Glucose oxidation, lipid oxidation, suppression of free fatty acid levels, and potassium disposal were similar in both groups. In contrast, nonoxidative glucose disposal was significantly reduced in patients compared with that in controls (37 +/- 2 versus 50 +/- 4 mumol/kg/min, p = 0.004). When glucose uptakes were matched during the hyperglycemic clamp studies, the rate of nonoxidative glucose uptake was normalized in the patients. These results provide the first direct evidence that asymptomatic atherosclerosis is associated with insulin resistance. This insulin resistance is characterized by reduced whole-body and nonoxidative glucose uptake. In contrast, glucose and lipid oxidation, potassium disposal, and suppression of free fatty acid levels during hyperinsulinemia did not differ between the subjects with and without atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, H Korpela, S Suntioinen, J Tuomilehto (1991)  Serum copper and the risk of acute myocardial infarction: a prospective population study in men in eastern Finland.   Am J Epidemiol 134: 3. 268-276 Aug  
Abstract: The authors investigated the association of serum copper concentration with the risk of acute myocardial infarction in 1,666 randomly selected men aged 42, 48, 54, or 60 years who had no symptomatic ischemic heart disease at entry. Baseline examinations in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study in Eastern Finland were done during 1984 to 1988. In Cox multivariate survival models adjusting for age, examination year, ischemic electrocardiogram in exercise, maximal oxygen uptake, diabetes, family history of ischemic heart disease, cigarette-years, mean systolic blood pressure, serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol subfraction HDL2 and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentrations and blood leukocyte count, serum copper concentration in the two highest tertiles (1.02-1.16 mg/liter and 1.17 mg/liter or more) associated with 3.5-fold (95% confidence interval (Cl) 1.3-9.4, p less than 0.05) and 4.0-fold (95 percent Cl 1.5-10.8, p less than 0.01) risk of acute myocardial infarction. These data indicate that high copper status, reflected by elevated serum copper concentration, is an independent risk factor for ischemic heart disease.
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1990
 
PMID 
M T Parvianinen, J T Salonen (1990)  Vitamin C status of 54-year old eastern Finnish men throughout the year.   Int J Vitam Nutr Res 60: 1. 47-51  
Abstract: We investigated the vitamin C (ascorbic acid) status in 1077 eastern Finnish men aged 54 years of age examined in the "Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study" in 1984-86. Dietary intake of ascorbic acid had a strong linear correlation to plasma ascorbic acid, and we found a clear seasonal variation in the plasma ascorbic acid levels: the highest values were found in August-September and again in April, and the lowest levels in November-January and in June. A true vitamin C depletion was found in 8.8% of the 1077 men studied, and, in addition, 16.5% had a mild vitamin C deprivation. The decreased plasma levels of this antioxidant vitamin may be associated with elevated blood pressure.
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PMID 
M Eskelinen, Y Collán, E Pesonen, J T Salonen (1990)  Factors associated with risk of breast cancer and persistence of symptoms in women with breast problems.   Ann Chir Gynaecol 79: 1. 10-14  
Abstract: Risk factors in breast cancer were analysed in a series of 293 women who were first seen at the Surgical Outpatient Department of Savonlinna Central Hospital in 1982-1983 for breast problems and were alive and willing to participate in a control examination and interview 4-5 years later. In 1986 and 1987 the patients were examined clinically and underwent mammography and interview. They were divided into three groups: 1) 49 patients with breast cancer in 1982 and 1983, 2) 49 with breast symptoms after primary treatment of benign disease, and 3) 195 patients without breast symptoms after primary treatment of benign disease. The groups were compared in terms of 18 suggested risk factors for breast cancer. Two factors were significantly associated with breast cancer (compared with all benign breast diseases): higher age of the patient and higher age at first delivery. Use of contraceptives was significantly associated with the presence of breast symptoms after treatment of benign breast disease (as compared with the absence of symptoms) (RR = 1.70 P less than 0.001). Hysterectomy and/or oophorectomy was significantly associated with the absence of breast symptoms among patients with benign breast disease (RR = 0.76, P less than 0.05). Our results suggest that symptoms after treatment of benign breast disease are associated with the levels of female sex hormones.
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PMID 
R Salonen, J T Salonen (1990)  Progression of carotid atherosclerosis and its determinants: a population-based ultrasonography study.   Atherosclerosis 81: 1. 33-40 Feb  
Abstract: We investigated the progression of carotid atherosclerosis in a population-based sample of 100 Eastern Finnish men aged 42, 48, 54 or 60 years. A high-resolution B-mode ultrasonographic examination was repeated after a follow-up of 24 months for each subject. The intimal-medial thickness (IMT) in the common carotid artery increased by -0.06 mm to 0.90 mm (mean 0.12 mm, SD 0.20 mm). Age (standardised partial coefficient, beta = 0.325, P = 0.0003), serum LDL cholesterol concentration (beta = 0.229, P = 0.0011), pack-years of smoking (beta = 0.274, P = 0.0023), blood leukocyte count (beta = 0.201, P = 0.0239), and platelet aggregability (beta = 0.165, P = 0.0646), measured at baseline, were the strongest predictors of atherosclerosis progression. Neither hypertension, current blood pressure level, serum HDL cholesterol nor serum HDL2 cholesterol concentration at the baseline examination had any association with the change of IMT over 2 yrs.
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PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen (1990)  Association of serum low density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking and hypertension with different manifestations of atherosclerosis.   Int J Epidemiol 19: 4. 911-917 Dec  
Abstract: We investigated the association of elevated serum low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels, smoking and hypertension with different manifestations of carotid atherosclerosis in a population-based sample of 720 Eastern Finnish men aged 42, 48, 54 or 60 years, examined in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Carotid atherosclerosis was assessed with high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography. Men who had neither a history nor symptoms of cardiovascular disease with serum LDL cholesterol concentration in the highest tertile (4.17 mM or more) had 3.40-fold (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.98-5.84) age-, smoking- and hypertension-adjusted probability of intimal-medial thickening as compared to men in the lowest serum LDL cholesterol tertile. The odds ratio for carotid plaque versus intimal-medial thickening was only 1.03 (95% CI 0.47-2.28). The respective odds ratios for smoking (28 pack-years or more) were 1.62 (95% CI 0.79-3.32) and 3.02 (95% CI 1.41-6.47) and those for hypertension were 1.10 (95% CI 0.70-1.73) and 0.99 (95% CI 0.53-1.84). Our findings suggest that elevated serum LDL cholesterol concentration associates with an increased risk of common carotid arterial wall thickening, whereas smoking is associated more strongly with carotid plaques than intimal-medial thickening. Our cross-sectional data do not support association between hypertension and either manifestation of carotid atherosclerosis.
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PMID 
V Kataja, K Syrjänen, S Syrjänen, R Mäntyjärvi, M Yliskoski, S Saarikoski, J T Salonen (1990)  Prospective follow-up of genital HPV infections: survival analysis of the HPV typing data.   Eur J Epidemiol 6: 1. 9-14 Mar  
Abstract: A series of 532 women with genital HPV infections has been prospectively followed-up without treatment since 1981 for a mean of 50 (+/-21) months. The patients were examined at six month intervals by colposcopy, PAP smears and/or biopsy. HPV typing of all biopsies was completed using in situ, Southern blot and/or sandwich hybridization with DNA probes for types 6, 11, 16, 18, 31 and 33. Survival data analysis was applied to analyse the clinical course (i.e. spontaneous regression and progression) of the HPV lesions stratified by their HPV type, currently available for 458 women. Clinical progression was significantly related to the HPV type present in the lesions. The progression rate was 11.1% (6/54) for HPV 6 lesions, 14.3% (8/56) for HPV 11, 35.2% (32/91) for HPV 16, 12.5% (4/32) for HPV 18, 18.8% (6/32) for HPV 31, 19.4% (6/31) for HPV 33 and 28.6% (4/14) for doubly infected lesions. The lowest progression rate, 6.1% (9/148), was found in lesions which remained constantly HPV DNA-negative. In the survival analysis the probability of progression varied significantly between the six HPV types (p = 0.0005, overall). After grouping the viral types as HPV 6/11 ('low risk'), HPV 16/18 ('high risk') and HPV 31/33 ('intermediate risk') the overall probability of progression remained significantly different (p = 0.0035, overall). In clinical regression, however, the HPV type was not an equally good predictor (p = 0.1952, overall). Within groups HPV 6/11, 16/18 and 31/33 the differences were even less significant (p = 0.4759, overall). In the pairwise comparison significant differences in progression occurred when HPV type 16 was compared to HPV 6, HPV 11 or HPV DNA-negative lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID 
G A Kaplan, J T Salonen (1990)  Socioeconomic conditions in childhood and ischaemic heart disease during middle age.   BMJ 301: 6761. 1121-1123 Nov  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE--To examine the association between socioeconomic conditions in childhood and ischaemic heart disease in middle aged men, including the role of physiological and behavioural risk factors. DESIGN--Prevalence study with extensive examination and testing and with recall of childhood conditions. SETTING--Population based study in Kuopio, Finland. SUBJECTS--Representative sample of 2679 men aged 42, 48, 54, and 60. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--Ischaemic findings on progressive maximal exercise test. RESULTS--Low socioeconomic style in childhood was associated with significantly higher prevalence of findings indicating ischaemias. Compared with those in the highest tertile of childhood socioeconomic conditions, the age adjusted odds ratio for subjects in the lowest tertile was 1.44 and for those in the middle tertile 1.35. Adjustment for years of cigarette smoking times the average number of cigarettes smoked, ratio of high density lipoprotein to low density lipoprotein cholesterol, fibrinogen and serum selenium concentrations, and adult height did not appreciably weaken the association. Adjustment for adult socioeconomic state resulted in a 16% decline in the association. The association was reduced to non-significance by adjustment for measures of prevalent cardiovascular illness. CONCLUSIONS--Socioeconomic state in childhood was significantly associated with ischaemic heart disease in middle aged men. Levels of risk factors measured at middle age did not account for this association, nor did adult height. Because childhood socioeconomic conditions precede the development of ischaemic heart disease the substantial impact of prevalent illness on the observed association suggests that ischaemic heart disease develops earlier in those with lower socioeconomic state during childhood.
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1989
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1989)  Antioxidants and platelets.   Ann Med 21: 1. 59-62 Feb  
Abstract: It is postulated that antioxidants reduce platelet activity by the stimulation of prostacyclin synthetase by scavenging synthesis-inhibiting peroxides. The experimental and clinical evidence supporting this theory is inconclusive. Clinical trials suggest that vitamin E reduced platelet aggregability. Nonexperimentally, a strong association has been observed between low serum selenium concentration and increased platelet aggregability. These findings suggest that antioxidants have an important role in the regulation of platelet function.
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PMID 
V Kataja, K Syrjänen, R Mäntyjärvi, M Väyrynen, S Syrjänen, S Saarikoski, S Parkkinen, M Yliskoski, J T Salonen, O Castren (1989)  Prospective follow-up of cervical HPV infections: life table analysis of histopathological, cytological and colposcopic data.   Eur J Epidemiol 5: 1. 1-7 Mar  
Abstract: A total of 532 women with established cervical HPV infection have been prospectively followed (without treatment) since 1981 for a mean of 45 (SD 21) months. The patients were examined by colposcopy, PAP smears and/or punch biopsy every 6 months. The life-table method was applied to analyze the clinical course (i.e. regression and progression) of the HPV lesions, stratified by their colposcopic pattern, PAP smear findings and grade of CIN. During the follow-up, 107 (41.8%) of 256 patients with HPV-NCIN lesion in the first punch biopsy, experienced spontaneous regression. The corresponding proportions for HPV-CIN I, HPV-CIN II and HPV-CIN III lesions were 31.1%, 34.2%, and 20.7%, respectively. In the overall comparison between these four groups, the heterogeneity in the probability of regression was statistically significant (p = 0.0005). Clinical progression was also associated significantly with the histological grade of the lesions in the first biopsy. Progression rate was only 5.8% for HPV-NCIN lesions, as compared to 12.3% for HPV-CIN I, 20% for HPV-CIN II, and 55.2% for HPV-CIN III. The probability of progression varied significantly between the four groups (p less than 0.00001). Cumulative proportion of regression was 46% for patients with PAP smear class I, 84% with class II, and 82% for those with class III, cells, i.e. PAP smear was not of value in predicting the regression. However, PAP smears predicted clinical progression (p = 0.006 overall).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID 
J Tuomilehto, P Puska, H Korhonen, H Mustaniemi, E Vartiainen, A Nissinen, K Kuulasmaa, H Niemensivu, J T Salonen (1989)  Trends and determinants of ischaemic heart disease mortality in Finland: with special reference to a possible levelling off in the early 1980s.   Int J Epidemiol 18: 3 Suppl 1. S109-S117  
Abstract: There has been a general decline in mortality from ischaemic heart disease (IHD) in Finland since the beginning of the 1970s. An intensified preventive programme was started in the province of North Karelia in 1972. Between 1974 and 1979 the decline in IHD mortality in North Karelian men was steeper than that in the rest of Finland. This favourable trend was associated with a fall in the levels of major coronary disease risk factors. Case-fatality from acute coronary events did not change much during this period. A levelling off in the decline in IHD mortality has been observed in the 1980s first in North Karelia and later in the whole of Finland. These findings from the official mortality statistics were confirmed in North Karelia by the data from the population-based coronary register. This levelling off in the decline in IHD mortality was associated with levelling off in risk-factor reductions in eastern Finland and with little improvement in risk-related behaviours in Finland during the 1980s. The IHD rates are still high and associated with persistent high risk factor levels and particularly with high serum cholesterol and blood pressure levels. Together with IHD mortality, the decline in total mortality also levelled off both in North Karelia and in the rest of Finland during the early 1980s. Compared with other countries, the rates of coronary disease and total mortality in the middle-aged Finnish population, especially among men, are among the highest in the world.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID 
J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen, G A Kaplan, P Puska (1989)  Contribution of risk factor changes to the decline in coronary incidence during the North Karelia project: a within-community analysis.   Int J Epidemiol 18: 3. 595-601 Sep  
Abstract: We investigated the contribution of risk factor changes to the decline in incidence of ischaemic heart disease between three five-year periods (1972-76, 1977-81, 1982-86) in a community-based cardiovascular disease (CVD) control programme, the nOrth Karelia project. Random population samples of over 10,000 people were examined in 1972, 1977 and 1982 and followed for five years. Population attributable benefits were estimated for each time period from reductions in excess risk associated with S-cholesterol, tobacco products per day and the mean of systolic and diastolic blood pressure which were entered in logistic models with age and sex. Changes in risk factors accounted in North Karelia for 89% and in the reference population for 20% of the decline in ischaemic heart disease from 1972-6 to 1977-81. In healthy people, risk factor reductions accounted in North Karelia for 100%, but in the reference population only for 23% of the decline. The decline was non-significant in both areas from 1977-81 to 1982-86. In subjects with either CVD or diabetes, there was no decline in North Karelia in either period, whereas 30% and 64% of the decline (ns) in the reference population in the two periods, respectively, was attributable to risk factor changes. These data suggest that although the decline in the incidence of ischaemic heart disease in North Karelia did not differ from that in the reference population it was largely attributable to risk factor reductions in the healthy population. The decline in the reference population appears to be associated with changes in lifestyle, secondary prevention activities and medical care.
Notes:
 
PMID 
P Puska, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen, J T Salonen, E Vartiainen, P Pietinen, K Koskela, H J Korhonen (1989)  The North Karelia project: 15 years of community-based prevention of coronary heart disease.   Ann Med 21: 3. 169-173 Jun  
Abstract: The North Karelia Project - a community-wide health intervention programme - was launched in 1972 as response to the local petition to reduce the heavy toll of heart disease in North Karelia. The strategy of community-based prevention was based on the previous pioneering international work on epidemiology of cardiovascular diseases and prevention in which Finland had in many ways participated. Comprehensive scientific evaluation of the programme was carefully designed. The effects of the programme on risk factor reduction and on prevention of cardiovascular diseases are assessed by large population surveys every five years and by data on incidence of cardiovascular diseases and mortality rates. The authors present the 15 years' results and some of the most recent findings of the North Karelia Project, and discuss the overall experience and its national an international implications.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, K Seppänen, R Rauramaa, R Salonen (1989)  Risk factors for carotid atherosclerosis: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   Ann Med 21: 3. 227-229 Jun  
Abstract: We assessed the severity of carotid atherosclerosis in 412 men from eastern Finland aged 42, 48, 54 or 60 years at examination with B-mode ultrasonography in 1987 in the Kuopi ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study (KIHD). Thirty-seven per cent of participants had intimal-medial thickening, 10% had plaques and 2% had stenosis. Age (P less than 0.001), cigarette-years (P less than 0.001), serum LDL cholesterol (P = 0.005), low income (P = 0.020) and low alcohol consumption (P = 0.048) had significant partial associations with the severity of carotid atherosclerosis. A linear regression model including these variables and plasma fibrinogen (NS) and serum HDL-cholesterol (NS) accounted for 33% of the variation in atherosclerosis severity. Our data provide further evidence on the role of smoking and LDL-cholesterol in atherosclerosis.
Notes:
1988
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, J S Slater, J Tuomilehto, R Rauramaa (1988)  Leisure time and occupational physical activity: risk of death from ischemic heart disease.   Am J Epidemiol 127: 1. 87-94 Jan  
Abstract: The relation of leisure time and occupational physical activity to the risk of death from ischemic heart disease was investigated in a cohort of 15,088 persons aged 30-59 years who had no history of cardiovascular disease or other condition which hindered physical activity. Two population samples were randomly chosen from eastern Finland. During a six-year follow-up, persons who were sedentary in leisure time (relative risk = 1.3, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.1-1.6) or at work (relative risk = 1.3, 95% CI = 1.1-1.6) had an excess risk of ischemic heart disease death when adjusted for age, health status, family history, and body mass index in multivariate logistic models. Adjustment for years of education, social network participation, cigarette consumption, serum cholesterol level, and blood pressure level weakened the residual association of low leisure time physical activity with the risk of ischemic heart disease death (relative risk = 1.2, 95% CI = 1.0-1.5), whereas the association for low occupational physical activity remained unchanged. The lack of leisure time physical activity and a sedentary occupation are associated with an increased risk of ischemic heart disease death, and the excess risk due to lack of leisure time physical activity is, in part, accounted for by other ischemic heart disease risk factors.
Notes:
 
PMID 
B Marti, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, P Puska (1988)  10-year trends in physical activity in the eastern Finnish adult population: relationship to socioeconomic and lifestyle characteristics.   Acta Med Scand 224: 3. 195-203  
Abstract: In a large, community-based cardiovascular disease prevention study in Eastern Finland, independent random population samples were surveyed in 1972, 1977 and 1982. The leisure-time physical activity (LTPA), occupational physical activity (OPA), and socioeconomic and lifestyle characteristics were assessed. In men and women aged 30-59, the proportion with high LTPA increased from 1972 to 1982 by approximately one half (p less than 0.001), whereas that of high OPA decreased during the same period (p less than 0.001). In both sexes, high overall physical activity fell from 1972 to 1977 (p less than 0.001), but no more from 1977 to 1982. The proportion of entirely sedentary remained stable. Education, income and younger age showed a positive, body mass index, smoking and OPA a graded, negative association with high LTPA in 1972 and 1982. Significant (p less than 0.001) differences in 10-year trends of changes in LTPA were observed: men and women with low education or income increased LTPA more than those with high education and income. Socioeconomic factors, such as income and education, appear to have lost importance as determinants of population-wide exercise, whereas the clustering of low physical activity with overweight and smoking has increased.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, K Seppänen, M Kantola, M Parviainen, G Alfthan, P H Mäenpää, E Taskinen, R Rauramaa (1988)  Relationship of serum selenium and antioxidants to plasma lipoproteins, platelet aggregability and prevalent ischaemic heart disease in Eastern Finnish men.   Atherosclerosis 70: 1-2. 155-160 Mar  
Abstract: In a cross-sectional population study of 1132 unselected Eastern Finnish men aged 54 years, serum selenium concentration had a weak positive association with plasma HDL cholesterol (standardised partial regression coefficient, beta = 0.061, P = 0.019) and a fairly strong inverse relationship (beta = -0.223, P less than 0.001) with the extent of ADP-induced platelet aggregation. Neither plasma ascorbate concentration nor alpha-tocopherol to total cholesterol ratio had any association with plasma lipoproteins, platelet aggregability or prevalent ischaemic heart disease (IHD). When a covariance-correction was applied, men with ischaemic ECG findings at exercise had a lower mean serum selenium than others (81.5 micrograms/l vs. 85.9 micrograms/l, P less than 0.01 for difference). This difference was equally large for men with neither symptoms nor previous diagnosis of IHD.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, M Ihanainen, M Parviainen, R Seppänen, M Kantola, K Seppänen, R Rauramaa (1988)  Blood pressure, dietary fats, and antioxidants.   Am J Clin Nutr 48: 5. 1226-1232 Nov  
Abstract: We investigated the association of dietary fatty acids and antioxidants with blood pressure in 722 eastern Finnish men aged 54 y, examined in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study in 1984-86. Men with self-reported hypertension or cerebrovascular disease or under antihypertensive medication were excluded. Allowing for the major anthropometric, dietary, medical, and psychological determinants of blood pressure in multivariate regression analyses, both plasma ascorbic acid (p = 0.0008) and serum selenium (p = 0.0017) concentrations had a moderate, independent inverse association, estimated dietary intake of saturated fatty acids had a positive association (p = 0.013), and estimated dietary intake of linolenic acid had an inverse (p = 0.048) association with the mean resting blood pressure. The marked elevation of blood pressure at the lowest levels of plasma ascorbic acid and serum Se concentrations supports the hypothesis that antioxidants play a role in the etiology of hypertension.
Notes:
 
PMID 
G A Kaplan, J T Salonen, R D Cohen, R J Brand, S L Syme, P Puska (1988)  Social connections and mortality from all causes and from cardiovascular disease: prospective evidence from eastern Finland.   Am J Epidemiol 128: 2. 370-380 Aug  
Abstract: The association between an a priori measure of social connections and five-year mortality from all causes, cardiovascular diseases (International Classification of Diseases, Eighth Revision (ICD-8) codes 390-458), and ischemic heart disease (ICD-8 codes 410-414) was studied in 13,301 men and women from eastern Finland who were first interviewed in 1972 or 1977. For men, there was a graded association between extent of social connections and mortality. In multivariate models with adjustment for age, smoking, serum cholesterol, mean weighted blood pressure, measures of prevalent illness, and other possible confounders, men who were in the two lowest quintiles of the social connections scale were at increased risk compared with those in the highest quintile (odds ratio (OR)all cause = 1.54, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.21-1.95; ORcardiovascular disease = 1.54, 95% CI = 1.11-2.13; ORischemic heart disease = 1.34, 95% CI = 0.94-1.90). No strong or consistent association was found for women. The association for men was modified by levels of blood pressure with the effect of low social connections greater at higher levels of blood pressure. In three separate analyses, there was no evidence for confounding or effect modification due to prevalent illness at baseline.
Notes:
 
PMID 
R Salonen, K Seppänen, R Rauramaa, J T Salonen (1988)  Prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis and serum cholesterol levels in eastern Finland.   Arteriosclerosis 8: 6. 788-792 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: We investigated the prevalence of carotid atherosclerosis and its association with serum lipoprotein cholesterol fractions in 412 Eastern Finnish men ages 42, 48, 54, or 60 years who were examined between February and December 1987 in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Carotid atherosclerosis was assessed with high-resolution B-mode ultrasonography. Of the participants, 37% had thickening of the intimal or medial layer of the arterial wall, 10% had plaques, 2% had stenosis in the right or left common carotid artery or in the carotid bifurcation, and only 51% were free of any detectable carotid atherosclerosis. The prevalence of atherosclerosis was 14.1%, 32.0%, 67.7%, and 81.9% in the four age groups, respectively. The mean age-adjusted serum low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentration was 3.67 mmol/l (142 mg/dl) in men free of carotid atherosclerosis and 4.02 mmol/l (155 mg/dl) in those with at least intimal thickening (p = 0.003 for difference). The mean age-adjusted serum cholesterol concentration in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction was 1.34 mmol/l (52 mg/dl) in the atherosclerosis-free and 1.27 mmol/l (49 mg/dl) in the atherosclerotic men (p = 0.029 for difference). There was a similar difference in both the serum HDL2 and the HDL3 cholesterol levels. Serum LDL and HDL (inverse) cholesterol were significant determinants of severity of carotid atherosclerosis in a multivariate regression model adjusting for age, obesity, plasma fibrinogen, cigarette-years, and duration of hypertension. Our data reveal the high prevalence of atherosclerosis in middle-aged Eastern Finnish men and provide further evidence of the roles of LDL and HDL cholesterol in atherosclerosis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Nissinen, J Tuomilehto, H J Korhonen, T Piha, J T Salonen, P Puska (1988)  Ten-year results of hypertension care in the community. Follow-up of the North Karelia hypertension control program.   Am J Epidemiol 127: 3. 488-499 Mar  
Abstract: The development of hypertension care over the 10-year period 1972-1982 in North Karelia and a reference area was assessed using three separate random samples of the population aged 30-59 years. The results show a clear improvement in the blood pressure levels of the population and in the hypertension care in North Karelia between 1972 and 1977 when the activities of the hypertension program of the North Karelia Project were gradually implemented. Awareness of elevated blood pressure increased from 39% to 71% among men and from 60% to 87% among women. The proportion of men under antihypertensive drug treatment increased from 4% to 10% and that of women increased from 10% to 15%. After 1977, the hypertension care was maintained but no further improvements were observed in general blood pressure levels. An improvement in hypertension care started in the reference area later than in North Karelia. In spite of favorable changes, the blood pressure level of the population was still high in 1982, the mean casual value among men being 145/87 mmHg and that among women being 141/84 mmHg. It is obvious that further progress in hypertension care is needed.
Notes:
1987
 
PMID 
R Salonen, T Nikkari, K Seppänen, J M Venäläinen, M Ihanainen, V Rissanen, R Rauramaa, J T Salonen (1987)  Effect of omega-3 fatty acid supplementation on platelet aggregability and platelet produced thromboxane.   Thromb Haemost 57: 3. 269-272 Jun  
Abstract: We investigated the sustained effect of 12-week supplementation of 2.880 g/day of omega-3 fatty acids on platelet aggregability, platelet produced thromboxane B2 concentration and serum fatty acid composition in a double-blind controlled trial in 44 healthy mildly overweight eastern Finnish men recruited from a representative population sample. The supplementation was discontinued seven days before the biochemical measurements. Body weight, alcohol consumption and dietary composition remained constant during the study. Even though the percentage of eicosapentaenoic acid (20:5 omega 3) in total serum lipids increased by 37% (p less than 0.01) and that of dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (20:3 omega 6) decreased by 18% (p less than 0.01) more in the omega-3 supplemented than placebo group during supplementation, there were no significant differences in the changes in either the ADP induced platelet aggregation or in vitro platelet produced thromboxane B2 concentration between the groups. These data suggest that omega-3 fatty acids have no detectable sustained effect either on ADP induced platelet aggregation or on thromboxane produced by the platelets in vitro.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1987)  Selenium in ischaemic heart disease.   Int J Epidemiol 16: 2. 323-328 Jun  
Abstract: Ecological between-area comparisons, hospital-based case-control studies and cross-sectional angiography studies have provided data on the role of selenium (Se) deficiency in the aetiology of ischaemic heart disease (IHD), but this evidence is, at best, suggestive because of the potential selection biases and the lack of certainty of the temporal direction of the observed associations. Out of the four cohort-based population studies published so far, one observed a moderate association between a reduced serum Se and an increased risk of IHD and all cardiovascular (CVD) deaths, one was equivocal and two did not find any association between serum Se and IHD. There are, however, several potential sources of biases acting towards the null hypothesis in these studies. In the pooled data of the two separate cohorts from eastern Finland including 377 people who experienced a CVD death or a non-fatal myocardial infarction and equally many event-free risk-factor matched controls, people with serum Se of less than 45 micrograms/l had a 1.7-fold (95% confidence interval 1.2-2.7) risk of an CVD event compared to those with higher serum Se. This association could, however, be explained by the covariation of Se with other nutrients, as for example n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. As the evidence concerning the role of serum Se in IHD is inconclusive, we need new epidemiological studies to test the association and experiments exploring the possible mechanisms.
Notes:
 
PMID 
B Marti, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, P Puska, A Nissinen (1987)  Relationship between leisure-time physical activity and risk factors for coronary heart disease in middle-aged Finnish women.   Acta Med Scand 222: 3. 223-230  
Abstract: Risk factors for coronary heart disease (CHD) and levels of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) were measured in a random sample of 4,059 women aged 25-64 years, residing in four areas of Finland. LTPA indexed as the product of weekly exercise sessions X their usual intensity showed an inverse association with smoking (p = 0.02) and with CHD risk estimate which combines the three main risk factors, smoking, serum cholesterol and blood pressure (p = 0.06), and a positive association with HDL cholesterol (p = 0.002). It was not associated with mean arterial pressure and serum total cholesterol. In a multiple regression analysis LTPA contributed independently, though modestly, to the model for CHD risk estimate. Age and body mass index were the most important independent predictors of both mean arterial pressure and CHD risk estimate. It is concluded that in middle-aged Finnish women, unlike men of the same population, high LTPA is only weakly related to lower CHD risk factor levels.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, A Tanskanen, P Pietinen, A Aro, J T Salonen, P Happonen, A Nissinen, P Puska (1987)  Coffee consumption is correlated with serum cholesterol in middle-aged Finnish men and women.   J Epidemiol Community Health 41: 3. 237-242 Sep  
Abstract: The association between coffee consumption and serum cholesterol was studied in a cross-sectional epidemiological study in Finland where the annual per capita consumption of coffee (13.0 kg) is the highest in the world. Coffee consumption was assessed by a questionnaire in a representative population sample of 4744 men and 4495 women aged 25 to 64 years. Serum total cholesterol and HDL-cholesterol concentrations were determined in fresh sera by the enzymatic method. Data on a large number of potential confounding variables were also collected. In the age group 25 to 44 years, the level of serum total cholesterol increased linearly with increasing coffee consumption in both sexes, but in people aged 45 to 64 the peak level of serum cholesterol was found in those who consumed 4 to 6 cups of coffee per day. In the analysis of covariance controlling for age, body mass index, intake of fat, sugar, and alcohol, smoking, physical activity, and fasting time, the mean level of serum cholesterol of men was lower (p less than 0.001) in those who drank no coffee (5.9 mmol/l) than in those who drank 1 to 3 cups (6.1 mmol/l) or 4 or more cups (6.2 mmol/l) per day. In women, the corresponding mean serum cholesterol values were 5.8 mmol/l, 6.1 mmol/l, and 6.1 mmol/l (p less than 0.05). Serum HDL-cholesterol levels did not vary significantly with coffee consumption. There was a slight inverse association between tea drinking and serum total cholesterol in men (p less than 0.05) but not in women. Although our results suggest a positive association, the impact of coffee drinking on serum cholesterol seems to be minimal. The results also indicate that the possible mechanisms do not include caffeine.
Notes:
 
PMID 
H Hämynen, E Vartiainen, T Sahi, U Pallonen, J T Salonen (1987)  Social, personality and environmental determinants of smoking in young Finnish men.   Scand J Soc Med 15: 4. 219-224  
Abstract: The study was based on 471 males, aged 19 to 20 years, who started their compulsory military service in three military bases in Southwest, Southeast and Northern Finland in February 1982. Of these subjects 48% smoked regularly and had smoked in the past three weeks. The correlation between the reported number of cigarettes smoked a day and serum thiocyanate was 0.60. Seventy-four per cent of the subjects whose best friend smoked, were current smokers compared with 24% of the others. Proportion of smokers was higher in urban areas than in rural areas. Among the 14 explanatory variables in the multivariate logistic analysis, family members' and friends' smoking, the place of residence, strenuousness of leisure-time physical activities, number of friends, rebelliousness, intelligence test score, and general pessimism were most strongly associated with the likelihood of being a current smoker. The model explained 87% of the smoking variance.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, M Ihanainen, M Parviainen, R Seppänen, K Seppänen, R Rauramaa (1987)  Vitamin C deficiency and low linolenate intake associated with elevated blood pressure: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study.   J Hypertens Suppl 5: 5. S521-S524 Dec  
Abstract: We investigated the association of dietary fatty acids and plasma antioxidative vitamins with blood pressure in 722 eastern Finnish men aged 54 years, examined in the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study in 1984-1986, who had no known hypertension nor any cerebrovascular disease. Allowing for the major anthropometric, dietary, medical and psychological determinants of blood pressure in a multivariate regression analysis, plasma ascorbic acid concentration had a moderate, independent inverse association (P less than 0.0001) and the estimated dietary intake of linolenic acid an inverse (P = 0.026) independent association with mean resting blood pressure. The marked elevation of blood pressure at the lowest levels of plasma vitamin C concentration supports the hypothesis of the role of antioxidants in the aetiology of hypertension.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, B Marti, J T Salonen, E Virtala, T Lahti, P Puska (1987)  Leisure-time physical activity is inversely related to risk factors for coronary heart disease in middle-aged Finnish men.   Eur Heart J 8: 10. 1047-1055 Oct  
Abstract: Coronary risk factors and levels of physical activity at leisure were measured in a random sample of 3975 men 25-64 years of age residing in four areas of Finland. An index of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) as the product of weekly exercise sessions times their usual intensity (expressed as metabolic equivalents) was computed. It showed a graded, inverse association with mean arterial blood pressure, smoking and serum thiocyanate, coronary heart disease risk estimate (combining blood pressure, total cholesterol and smoking), and a nonlinear favorable association with serum lipoproteins. In multiple regression analysis, LTPA contributed significantly and independently to the variation in mean arterial pressure; the standardized regression coefficients were -0.06 for LTPA, 0.09 for weekly alcohol consumption, 0.25 for body mass index, 0.25 for age. In the regression of coronary risk estimate, the standardized regression coefficients were -0.19 for LTPA, 0.22 for weekly alcohol consumption, 0.09 for body mass index, 0.15 for age. There was no evidence that LTPA above 2000 kcal of weekly energy expenditure was associated with further reduced coronary risk factor levels. These findings thus support the inverse direction of the association between exercise and coronary risk factors but they also point towards an independent, but modest, role of leisure-time physical activity as a determinant of coronary risk estimate and blood pressure.
Notes:
 
PMID 
E V Puhakainen, R D Barlow, J T Salonen (1987)  An automated colorimetric assay for urine nicotine metabolites: a suitable alternative to cotinine assays for the assessment of smoking status.   Clin Chim Acta 170: 2-3. 255-262 Dec  
Abstract: We have modified the direct barbituric acid (DBA) test for urine nicotine metabolites so that it can be used on a continuous flow auto-analyser. The performance of the method was compared with a cotinine radio-immunoassay (RIA). The auto-analyser DBA method and cotinine RIA performed equally well in terms of assessing smoking status, yielding a false positive rate of 1.5% at a detection rate of 98% when compared to self-reported smoking information. The results obtained with the two methods were correlated, r = 0.91, although the DBA method results were consistently higher than the corresponding cotinine RIA results; the method detects cotinine and other nicotine metabolites. The coefficient of variation for the DBA method was 3.4% compared with 10% for the RIA. The DBA method has a throughput of about 250 samples per day compared to about 70 per day by RIA and the reagents are readily obtained and inexpensive.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, B Marti, L Jalkanen, P Puska, A Nissinen, E Wolf (1987)  Body weight and risk of myocardial infarction and death in the adult population of eastern Finland.   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 295: 6599. 623-627 Sep  
Abstract: Body mass index (weight (kg) divided by height squared (m2] and its association with the risk of myocardial infarction and death from all causes were studied prospectively in a randomly selected population sample in eastern Finland aged 30-59 at outset in 1972. The study population consisted of 3786 men and 4120 women. The participation rate in the survey in 1972 was over 90%. All deaths and admissions to hospital in the sample were obtained from the National Death Certificate and Hospital Discharge Registers. During the seven years of follow up until 1978, 170 men and 52 women had acute myocardial infarction, and during the nine years up to 1980, 223 men and 92 women died. Independent of age, men with a body mass index of 28.5 or more had a significantly higher incidence of acute myocardial infarction. This effect was also independent of smoking but not independent of biological coronary risk factors--that is, serum cholesterol concentration and blood pressure. In the analysis stratified for smoking in men the body mass index total mortality curve was J shaped among non-smokers, whereas smoking entirely outweighed body mass index as a predictor of death. Body mass index did not contribute significantly to the risk of either acute myocardial infarction or death in women. It is concluded that a body mass index of around 29.0-31.0 or more is not only a marker for coronary risk factors but is also a predictor of acute myocardial infarction in men.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Happonen, R Salonen, H Korhonen, A Nissinen, P Puska, J Tuomilehto, E Vartiainen (1987)  Interdependence of associations of physical activity, smoking, and alcohol and coffee consumption with serum high-density lipoprotein and non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol--a population study in eastern Finland.   Prev Med 16: 5. 647-658 Sep  
Abstract: The interdependence of the associations of physical activity, smoking, and consumption of alcohol and coffee with serum high-density lipoprotein and non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations was studied in 9,347 persons ages 25-64 years from east and southwest Finland. In covariance analyses with corrections for age, body mass index, saturated fat index, and fasting time, the mean adjusted serum high-density lipoprotein to non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio was high among physically active male non-smokers but not among smokers (P = 0.024 for two-way interaction). The cholesterol ratio was lower among both men (P = 0.010 for two-way interaction) and women (P = 0.030 for two-way interaction) reporting no or very little use of alcohol, and this association was stronger among smokers and women with high coffee consumption (P less than 0.001 for two-way interaction). Our data suggest that the elevating effect of regular physical exercise on serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol may be absent in smokers, whereas that of alcohol is greater in smokers than nonsmokers. High coffee consumption associates with decreased serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in smokers but increased levels in non-smokers.
Notes:
1986
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen, P Puska, J T Salonen, L Jalkanen (1986)  Long-term effects of cessation of smoking on body weight, blood pressure and serum cholesterol in the middle-aged population with high blood pressure.   Addict Behav 11: 1. 1-9  
Abstract: Smoking habits are continuously changing in the population. Cessation of smoking is not only often difficult but may lead to undesired consequences, esp. to weight gain. A random sample of 2283 persons with mild hypertension was followed up for 5 years in Eastern Finland and examined at the community-based cardiovascular program. During that time 30% of those smoking initially stopped smoking. Men gained weight on the average 3.6 kg upon stopping smoking (p less than 0.001) after controlling for age, change in fat and sugar intake and change in physical activity at leisure time). In women cessation of smoking was not related to weight changes. There was no evidence in this follow-up that smoking or cessation of smoking would have any independent impact on blood pressure or serum total cholesterol level.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, A Tanskanen, J T Salonen, A Nissinen, K Koskela (1986)  Effects of smoking and stopping smoking on serum high-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels in a representative population sample.   Prev Med 15: 1. 35-45 Jan  
Abstract: Serum high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels were assessed in a random sample of 939 men and 853 women ages 14-65 years in eastern Finland. Amount of daily smoking measured by serum thiocyanate concentration was negatively and independently associated with serum HDL cholesterol level and HDL/total cholesterol ratio in men. This negative association seemed largely to be due to low HDL cholesterol levels in heavy smokers. Both male and female current smokers had lower HDL cholesterol levels and HDL/total cholesterol ratios than those who had never smoked. This difference was found even after adjustment for age, body mass index, and beer drinking. The reduction of HDL cholesterol level seemed to be reversible, because those who had recently stopped smoking had higher HDL cholesterol levels and higher HDL/total cholesterol ratios than current smokers.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Nissinen, J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, T E Kottke, T Piha (1986)  The influence of socioeconomic factors on blood pressure control during a community-based hypertension control programme.   Acta Cardiol 41: 2. 99-109  
Abstract: The hypertension programme of the North Karelia Project aimed at lowering the high blood pressure level among the whole population. The influence of socioeconomic factors on the effect of reorganized hypertension care was analyzed among a cohort of 222 hypertensive patients during the five year follow-up. The fall in mean arterial pressure was significantly greater in North Karelia than in the reference area. A slight but not significant difference was found in blood pressure reduction between high and low socioeconomical classes. The results were better in higher socioeconomic groups, but the blood pressure reduction was clear also in lower socioeconomic groups. Our results indicate that the systematic community-based hypertension control programme will result in favourable changes in blood pressure level in the entire population without any clear preference on particular socioeconomic subgroups.
Notes:
 
PMID 
R Rauramaa, J T Salonen, K Seppänen, R Salonen, J M Venäläinen, M Ihanainen, V Rissanen (1986)  Inhibition of platelet aggregability by moderate-intensity physical exercise: a randomized clinical trial in overweight men.   Circulation 74: 5. 939-944 Nov  
Abstract: It has been postulated that platelet function plays an important role in the initiation of atherosclerosis. Currently there are no definitive data on the longer-term effects of regular physical exercise on platelet function in humans. We assessed the influence of regular moderate-intensity physical exercise (brisk walking to slow jogging) on platelet aggregation in a population-based sample of middle-aged, overweight, mildly hypertensive men in eastern Finland. In this controlled study, we evaluated the net effect of exercise on platelet aggregation by studying changes in optical density and ATP release in platelet-rich plasma. A significant inhibition of secondary platelet aggregation from 27% to 36% was observed in the men taking regular exercise. These findings give new insight into the possible protective effects of exercise against the risk of ischemic heart disease.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, J Geboers, J T Salonen, A Nissinen, K Kuulasmaa, P Puska (1986)  Decline in cardiovascular mortality in North Karelia and other parts of Finland.   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 293: 6554. 1068-1071 Oct  
Abstract: The trends in mortality from ischaemic heart disease, cerebrovascular stroke, and all cardiovascular diseases were analysed for the province of North Karelia and for the rest of Finland. Linear trends in mortality were computed for the population aged 35 to 64 for the period from 1969 to 1982, and changes in mortality between the three year means of 1969-71 and 1980-2 were calculated. In North Karelia, where a community based preventive programme has been carried out since 1972, the annual decline in mortality from ischaemic heart disease in men was on average 2.9%, whereas in the rest of Finland it was 2.0%. For women the respective average annual declines in mortality were 4.9% and 3.0%. The net decline from 1969-71 to 1980-2 in North Karelia was 100 deaths/100,000 men. The annual mortality from all cardiovascular disease in men decreased by 2.9% in North Karelia and by 2.6% in the rest of Finland; in women the decreases were 6.0% and 5.0% a year, respectively. The net decline in North Karelia was 71 deaths/100,000 men. The decline in mortality from all causes was also appreciable in both sexes in North Karelia, but it did not differ significantly from national trends.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, E Taskinen, R Salonen, K Seppänen, J Venäläinen, R Rauramaa (1986)  Effects of bevantolol and atenolol on symptoms, exercise tolerance and metabolic risk factors in angina pectoris.   Am J Cardiol 58: 12. 35E-40E Nov  
Abstract: To assess the effects of bevantolol on stable angina pectoris of effort and its impact on metabolic risk factors, a comparison study of this beta 1-blocking agent and atenolol was undertaken in 40 subjects (mean age 51 years). After a 4-week, single-blind, placebo washout period, 12 men and 8 women were randomized to receive 150 mg of bevantolol twice daily and 12 men and 8 women to treatment with 100 mg of atenolol once daily in a parallel, double-blind, 12-week treatment phase. Patients were assessed at weeks 2, 6 and 12 after bicycle exercise until angina or ST-segment depression greater than or equal to 0.15 mV appeared. Concentrations of cholesterol lipoproteins and 3 prostaglandin metabolites were determined. One patient receiving bevantolol was withdrawn from the study because of insufficient efficacy and 2 receiving atenolol were withdrawn because of side effects. After 2 weeks of therapy, significant decreases were seen in both groups in the number of angina attacks, mean sitting heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, mean maximum heart rate during exercise and mean double-product of systolic blood pressure and heart rate at the end of exercise. There was a trend toward significance in the increase of mean duration of exercise and total work performed with both agents, although these values were not statistically significant. Both high density lipoproteins and the ratio of high density lipoproteins to low density lipoproteins increased in the bevantolol group and decreased in the atenolol group. These changes were statistically significant at week 6.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, T E Kottke, D R Jacobs, P J Hannan (1986)  Analysis of community-based cardiovascular disease prevention studies--evaluation issues in the North Karelia Project and the Minnesota Heart Health Program.   Int J Epidemiol 15: 2. 176-182 Jun  
Abstract: Karelia project of the Minnesota Heart Health Program. International Journal of Epidemiology 1986, 15: 176-182. Community-based cardiovascular disease control studies represent an effort to change cardiovascular disease rates in entire communities. Communities, rather than individuals, are the primary units of analysis. The cross-community multiple time series model to estimate and test the effects is based on multiple communities that are evaluated at several points over time. Issues that influence the power of the analysis include: the number of communities to be studied, community size and composition, sample sizes of surveys, the decision to use cohorts or cross-sectional surveys, the number of surveys conducted in each community, and assumptions of latencies in the effects. These points are illustrated using the experiences of the North Karelia Project and the Minnesota Heart Health Program. The North Karelia Project was a community-based cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention programme consisting of a five-year intervention period in 1972-7. It took place in two provinces in Finland. The Minnesota Heart Health Program is similar, taking place between 1980 and 1990 in six communities in the American Midwest.
Notes:
1985
 
PMID 
H Mustaniemi, J T Salonen, K Pyörälä (1985)  Contribution of electrocardiograms, serum enzymes and history of chest pain to the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction--a community-based register study in North Karelia, Finland, 1972-1981.   Eur Heart J 6: 1. 21-28 Jan  
Abstract: The contribution of electrocardiograms, serum enzymes and history of chest pain to the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) was examined in a series of 3123 persons with a definite acute myocardial infarction registered in a community-based myocardial infarction register study in North Karelia, eastern Finland in 1972-1981. Criteria for chest pain history, serum enzyme and electrocardiographic findings were those used in the WHO co-ordinated myocardial infarction register studies. The history of chest pain typical of AMI was obtained in approximately 90% of both men and women in all age groups. Among persons with first AMI, the proportion of unequivocal ECG changes was higher among men than in women and declined with age in both sexes (81.8% in men 20-44 years of age, 47.8% in men 75 years of age or more; 61.7% in women 20-54 years of age and 45-6% in women 75 years of age or more) and lower among persons with recurrent AMI, but even among them it decreased with age. The proportion of serum enzyme elevations was approximately 90% in all subgroups. The results of the present study reconfirm that the contribution of elevated serum enzymes is particularly important in patients with recurrent acute myocardial infarction and old age. Elevated serum enzymes should receive greater attention in surveillance studies aiming to detect trends in AMI incidence in populations.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, H Hämynen, O P Heinonen (1985)  Impact of a health education program and other factors on stopping smoking after heart attack.   Scand J Soc Med 13: 3. 103-108  
Abstract: A prospective follow-up study was carried out to investigate the impact of a health education program and other factors related to patient's social background and severity of heart attack on stopping smoking after heart attack. The study consisted of male patients below the age of 65 years, who had suffered a heart attack between April 1 and September 30, 1977, living in two provinces of eastern Finland, North Karelia and Kuopio. Of the patients who smoked before the heart attack, 102 responded to both the 6- and the 12-month follow-up postal survey. Of these 102 patients, 25 stopped smoking within 12 months after the heart attack, while 77 continued to smoke. Continuing smoking was most strongly associated with working and unemployment before heart attack, maximum serum aspartate aminotransferase (GOT) concentration and subjective recovery after the heart attack. The quitting rate among men in the program area was 1.2-fold (p = 0.012) compared with the reference area men, after making allowance for the seven most confounding factors in the multivariate analysis. This observation indicates that either the community-based primary program or the secondary prevention program in North Karelia succeeded in dissuading patients from smoking after heart attack.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, A Nissinen (1985)  Factors associated with changes in serum cholesterol during a community-based hypertension programme.   Acta Med Scand 217: 3. 243-252  
Abstract: A cohort of 1019 male and 1232 female hypertensives, aged 25-59 years, based on a random population sample, was followed for five years during a community-based cardiovascular prevention programme. A small mean reduction in serum cholesterol level was found. The observed changes in casual serum cholesterol values were partly due to the regression to the mean. The reductions were most marked in elderly people and in those with high baseline serum cholesterol values. The partial regressions of the cholesterol change were computed in subgroups by age, sex and baseline serum cholesterol level. Changes in weight in men and in age in women were the strongest independent predictors of the change in serum cholesterol. Changes in dietary fat intake were also associated with the change in serum cholesterol. Only a small part of the total variation in the change in serum cholesterol was explained by the regression models. The results indicate that reduction of the serum cholesterol level among hypertensive persons, especially men, was caused by changes in their dietary habits.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, H Hämynen, U Leino, E Kostiainen, T Sahi (1985)  Relation of alcohol, physical activity, dietary fat and smoking to serum HDL and total cholesterol in young Finnish men.   Scand J Soc Med 13: 3. 99-102  
Abstract: The study was based on 471 men, aged 19 to 20 years, who started their compulsory military service in three military bases in Southwest, Southeast and Northern Finland in February 1982. The data were gathered by means of self-administered questionnaires. A fasting venous blood specimen was taken to determine serum HDL and total cholesterol, gamma-glutamyltransferase and thiocyanate. In this cross-sectional study a few variables based on the self-administered questionnaire explained 8% and 7% of the variation in serum HDL and total cholesterol, respectively. Our results show that easily measurable behavioural factors do contribute to serum HDL and total cholesterol levels in young men. In our study the impact of alcohol consumption on serum HCL cholesterol was greater than in most previous studies. Our findings give additional support to the hypothesis that even a very modest amount of regular physical exercise has the effect of increasing the serum HDL cholesterol level.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, L Jalkanen, J T Salonen, A Nissinen (1985)  Factors associated with changes in body weight during a five-year follow-up of a population with high blood pressure.   Scand J Soc Med 13: 4. 173-180  
Abstract: In 1972 a cardiovascular disease prevention programme was started in North Karelia in Eastern Finland. At the outset of the programme a random sample comprising 10940 persons aged 25 to 59 years was studied. Those subjects whose systolic blood pressure was greater than or equal to 175 and/or diastolic greater than or equal to 100 mmHg or who were undergoing antihypertensive treatment, were re-examined in 1977. Their body weight was measured both in 1972 and 1977. The changes in their physical activity, smoking and eating habits were also interviewed. The men aged 25 to 49 years had increased their body mass index by 0.4 kg/m2 and the men aged 50 to 59 years by 0.2 kg/m2, on average. In women (aged 25 to 49 years) body mass index had increased by 0.5 kg/m2 but decreased in the age group 50 to 59 years by 0.2 kg/m2, on average. In men the change in body weight exerted the strongest partial regression on the change in smoking, age and physical activity (both in leisure time and at work). In women aged 25 to 49 years the reasons for increased body weight were the same as in men. In older women, aged 50 to 59 years the decrease in body weight was associated with age, change in amount of smoking and initiation of antihypertensive drug therapy.
Notes:
 
PMID 
K Pyörälä, J T Salonen, T Valkonen (1985)  Trends in coronary heart disease mortality and morbidity and related factors in Finland.   Cardiology 72: 1-2. 35-51  
Abstract: A marked increase in the coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality of working-age men and women occurred in Finland from the 1950s until the 1960s. Around the year 1970, CHD mortality started to decline and this decline still continues. In the age group 35-64 years the average annual decline of CHD mortality in the 1970s was 1.8% for men and 3.4% for women. Limited data available on trends in CHD morbidity show that the decline in CHD mortality is accompanied by a decline in the incidence of non-fatal myocardial infarction. CHD mortality and incidence are higher in east Finland than in west Finland and this east-west difference has so far persisted during the declining trend. The decline in CHD mortality and incidence in the 1970s has been preceded and paralleled by changes into favourable direction in dietary fat consumption and population mean levels for serum cholesterol, prevalence of smoking among adult Finnish men, control of hypertension by antihypertensive drug therapy, and management of patients with symptomatic CHD. Both the changes in life-styles and CHD risk factor levels, as well as changes in the management of patients with CHD, appear to have been contributing to the decline in CHD mortality and incidence in Finland.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Sivenius, K Pyörälä, O P Heinonen, J T Salonen, P Riekkinen (1985)  The significance of intensity of rehabilitation of stroke--a controlled trial.   Stroke 16: 6. 928-931 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: Of the 373 stroke patients 95 were admitted to the feasibility study of stroke rehabilitation. The patients were divided into two groups, an intensive and a normal treatment group. In this study, the functional recovery of stroke, measured by ADL and motor function was significantly better in the intensive treatment group. There was no difference in institutionalization or incidence of death between the groups. The gain of ADL and motor function was greatest during the first three months after stroke in the intensive treatment group. The conclusion is that intensified physiotherapy seems to improve the functional recovery of stroke patients.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, R Lappeteläinen, P H Mäenpää, G Alfthan, P Puska (1985)  Risk of cancer in relation to serum concentrations of selenium and vitamins A and E: matched case-control analysis of prospective data.   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 290: 6466. 417-420 Feb  
Abstract: The independent and joint associations of serum selenium and vitamin A (retinol) and E (alpha tocopherol) concentrations with the risk of death from cancer were studied in 51 case-control pairs--that is, 51 patients with cancer, each paired with a control matched for age, sex, and smoking. Case-control pairs came from a random sample of some 12000 people aged 30-64 years resident in two provinces of eastern Finland who were followed up for four years. Patients who died of cancer during the follow up period had a 12% lower mean serum selenium concentration (p = 0.015) than the controls. The difference persisted when deaths from cancer in the first follow up year were excluded. The adjusted risk of fatal cancer was 5.8-fold (95% confidence interval 1.2-29.0) among subjects in the lowest tertile of selenium concentrations compared with those with higher values. Subjects with both low selenium and low alpha tocopherol concentrations in serum had an 11.4-fold adjusted risk. Among smoking men with cancer serum retinol concentrations were 26% lower than in smoking controls (p = 0.002). These data suggest that dietary selenium deficiency is associated with an increased risk of fatal cancer, that low vitamin E intake may enhance this effect, and that decreased vitamin or provitamin A intake contributes to the risk of lung cancer among smoking men with a low selenium intake.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Salonen, I Penttilä, J Herranen, M Jauhiainen, M Kantola, R Lappeteläinen, P H Mäenpää, G Alfthan, P Puska (1985)  Serum fatty acids, apolipoproteins, selenium and vitamin antioxidants and the risk of death from coronary artery disease.   Am J Cardiol 56: 4. 226-231 Aug  
Abstract: The independent association of serum concentrations of saturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids, apolipoproteins AI and B, selenium and vitamins A and E with the risk of death from coronary artery disease (CAD) was studied in 92 persons with no previous myocardial infarction, who died from CAD during a 5-year follow-up, and their 92 1-to-1 matched controls. Case-control pairs came from a randomly drawn population sample of approximately 12,000 persons aged 30 to 64 years from 2 provinces of eastern Finland, an area with exceptionally high CAD mortality. Control subjects were matched for sex, age, serum cholesterol, mean arterial pressure, tobacco consumption and history of cardiovascular diseases. The persons who died of CAD had lower serum esterified arachidonic acid concentrations before follow-up than the control subjects (41 vs 48 mg/liter, p = 0.05), and this difference was greater for pairs with no chest pain on effort (36 vs 50 mg/liter, p less than 0.05). The adjusted risk of CAD death in persons with a serum polyunsaturated to saturated (P/S) fatty acid ratio of 0.28 or less (in the lowest tertile) was 3.5-fold (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.5 to 8.2) compared with those with higher serum P/s ratios in a multivariate logistic model and 5.6-fold (95% CI 1.6 to 19.8) for pairs with no chest pain on effort. A low serum apolipoprotein AI concentration (1.25 g/liter or less, in the lowest tertile) was associated with a 2.5-fold (95% CI 1.1 to 5.7) adjusted risk of CAD death among the chest pain-free persons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Notes:
 
PMID 
T E Kottke, P Puska, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen (1985)  Projected effects of high-risk versus population-based prevention strategies in coronary heart disease.   Am J Epidemiol 121: 5. 697-704 May  
Abstract: The potential benefits of a high-risk and a population strategy to prevent cardiovascular disease deaths by lowering total serum cholesterol and diastolic blood pressure were estimated. The first strategy concentrates on the top 10% of the risk distribution, and the second strategy changes risk factor distributions of the entire population. With the high-risk strategy, lowering total serum cholesterol 20% and diastolic blood pressure to 90 mmHg would result in a 28% reduction in death from cardiovascular disease. Lowering total serum cholesterol to 190 mg/dl and diastolic blood pressure to 80 mmHg with this strategy would result in a 33 per cent reduction in death from cardiovascular disease. These expected changes approximate those expected by lowering total serum cholesterol by 10% and diastolic blood pressure by 5% with the population strategy. Changes in total serum cholesterol (20% lowering) and diastolic blood pressure (10% lowering) that have been achieved in nutrition intervention trials would result in a 50% decline in cardiovascular disease death rates if applied to the whole population. If population mean total serum cholesterol could be lowered to 190 mg/dl and population mean diastolic blood pressure could be lowered to 80 mmHg, a 70% reduction in cardiovascular disease death rates would be expected. This suggests that only a population approach can prevent the majority of deaths from cardiovascular disease in a community.
Notes:
 
PMID 
K Aho, T Palosuo, V Raunio, P Puska, A Aromaa, J T Salonen (1985)  When does rheumatoid disease start?   Arthritis Rheum 28: 5. 485-489 May  
Abstract: Stored serum specimens collected in connection with a community-oriented epidemiologic study were available from 30 subjects who later developed seropositive rheumatoid arthritis. In 9 of these pre-rheumatoid specimens, the Rose-Waaler test result was positive, and in 16, the latex fixation test was positive. Two-thirds of the samples were positive when the interval between taking the blood specimen and onset of the disease was less than 4 years, and one-third were positive when the interval was greater than or equal to 4 years. The occurrence of rheumatoid factor preceded the onset of clinical disease more often in males than in females.
Notes:
1984
 
PMID 
R Rauramaa, J T Salonen, K Kukkonen-Harjula, K Seppänen, E Seppälä, H Vapaatalo, J K Huttunen (1984)  Effects of mild physical exercise on serum lipoproteins and metabolites of arachidonic acid: a controlled randomised trial in middle aged men.   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 288: 6417. 603-606 Feb  
Abstract: To study the effects of physical exercise on biochemical risk factors for ischaemic heart disease 31 healthy middle aged men undertook regular physical exercise for two months and 29 served as controls in a randomised trial. In the men taking regular exercise serum cholesterol concentrations increased 26% more in the high density lipoprotein subfraction two (HDL2) and decreased 31% more in the subfraction three (HDL3) and 9% more in the low density lipoprotein fraction than in the control group. A tendency towards increased plasma 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha concentration and decreased serum thromboxane B2 concentration was found during the period of regular exercise, but prostaglandin E2 concentrations remained unchanged. The increase in plasma 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha concentration was associated with an increase in serum HDL2 cholesterol concentration in the group taking regular exercise. Our data suggest that mild regular physical exercise favourably influences cholesterol distribution in serum lipoproteins in healthy middle aged men and may have beneficial effects on circulating metabolites of arachidonic acid.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, H Enlund, J T Salonen, A Nissinen (1984)  Alcohol, patient compliance and blood pressure control in hypertensive patients.   Scand J Soc Med 12: 4. 177-181  
Abstract: The association of self-reported use of alcohol with blood pressure and compliance with antihypertensive medication was studied in a randomly selected population sample in eastern Finland. We found a positive correlation between reported use of alcohol and diastolic blood pressure level and a negative correlation with the reduction of diastolic blood pressure during a five-year treatment. These correlations were independent of age, gender, and blood pressure level 5 years earlier. The use of alcohol was associated, especially in men, with poor compliance with antihypertensive medication. In addition to a possible direct contribution to high blood pressure, alcohol intake resulted in an inadequate control of blood pressure in male hypertensive patients by lowering patient compliance.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1984)  Analgesics and risk of coronary and other death in middle-aged men in eastern Finland.   Acta Med Scand 216: 3. 295-299  
Abstract: The association between oral analgesics and the risk of death from ischaemic heart disease (IHD), cardiovascular disease, disease other than IHD, and any disease was studied in a cohort of 3551 men aged 30-59 years, based on a random sample from the population of eastern Finland. A number of potential coronary risk factors were allowed for in multiple logistic models. On the basis of these data, a regular use of oral analgesics is associated with a decreased risk of death from IHD. The relative risk was 0.6 with 95% confidence interval (CI) of 0.2-0.9 for IHD death and 0.6 (95% CI = 0.4-0.9) for cardiovascular death. No significant association was found between oral analgesics and the risk of death from diseases other than IHD.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, O P Heinonen (1984)  Mental retardation and mother's hypertension during pregnancy.   J Ment Defic Res 28 (Pt 1): 53-56 Mar  
Abstract: A comparison of the history of hypertension in the mother during pregnancy was made between a group of 136 mentally retarded children and a randomly selected control group of 122 children. The cases and the controls were 9 or 10 years of age at the time of the survey. A number of potentially confounding factors were controlled for in a multiple logistic model. Maternal hypertension during pregnancy was associated with a relative risk of mental retardation in the offspring of 6.1 with 95% confidence interval of 1.3-28.9.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, J Geboers, J V Joossens, J T Salonen, A Tanskanen (1984)  Trends in stomach cancer and stroke in Finland. Comparison to northwest Europe and USA.   Stroke 15: 5. 823-828 Sep/Oct  
Abstract: The mortality rates of stomach cancer and stroke were found to decrease in a similar way over a given time in different countries. The same phenomenon can be observed in Finland for both sexes. Salt is suggested to be the linking factor in the stroke-stomach cancer relationship. Recent studies indicate that salt intake in Finland is very high. Actual salt consumption levels are in Finland as high as they were in Belgium 15 years ago. The same observations can be made for cerebrovascular and stomach cancer mortality, making the salt hypothesis plausible. In contrast from 1972-73 on stroke mortality decreases faster than stomach cancer mortality. This could be observed in other western countries: USA, Austria, England and Wales, Belgium, West Germany, etc. The steeper decline may be the consequence of mass drug treatment of hypertension which started in Finland during the early years of 1970's, and also the consequence of changes in dietary habits, especially in fat intake in Finland.
Notes:
 
PMID 
T E Kottke, A Nissinen, P Puska, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto (1984)  Message dissemination for a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention programme (the North Karelia Project).   Scand J Prim Health Care 2: 3. 99-104 Sep  
Abstract: The North Karelia Project was a community-based pilot programme in an Eastern Finnish community of 180,000 adults. During the intervention period from 1972 to 1977, the project successfully demonstrated that changing risk factors at the community level was feasible and could result in a significant reduction in disease rates. The North Karelia Project used mass media for dissemination of the message, but relied on face-to-face contact to persuade people to adopt the new lifestyles. Training seminars for professionals were a key programme component. On average, one seminar was conducted every two and a half weeks. Total project costs were only one per cent of the total health services costs for the county during the project. These findings suggest that community programmes can improve both subjective and objective cardiovascular health, and that the strategy of integrating funding into the project recruitment and commitment process is appropriate and may even be necessary for a successful community based heart disease prevention programme.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, J T Salonen, A Nissinen (1984)  Isolated systolic hypertension and its relationship to the risk of myocardial infarction, cerebrovascular disease and death in a middle-aged population.   Eur Heart J 5: 9. 739-744 Sep  
Abstract: The prevalence of hypertension in general and of those complications associated with isolated systolic hypertension (at least 165 mmHg systolic and less than 95 mmHg diastolic pressure) were assessed in a random sample of 3888 men and 4336 women aged 30-59 years at the beginning of the study. The prevalence of isolated systolic hypertension was about 5% both in men and women aged 30 to 49 years; in those aged 50 to 59 years the prevalence was 7% in men and 13% in women. Systolic hypertension was associated with an increased risk of acute myocardial infarction (AMI), cerebrovascular stroke and death both in men and women in the seven-year follow-up period. The relative risk of AMI in men and women with isolated systolic hypertension was 1.65 (P less than 0.05) and 0.87, respectively, and the relative risk of stroke 0.57 and 1.29, respectively. Isolated systolic hypertension is not uncommon in the middle-aged population and its impact on cardiovascular complications seems to be significant not only on the elderly but also in the middle-aged.
Notes:
 
PMID 
T E Kottke, P Puska, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen (1984)  Changes in perceived heart disease risk and health during a community-based heart disease prevention program: the North Karelia project.   Am J Public Health 74: 12. 1404-1405 Dec  
Abstract: To test whether the cardiovascular disease declines in North Karelia were accompanied by subjective improvements in health, we analyzed responses to two questions about perceived risk of heart disease and health status on independent random population samples surveyed 10 years apart. Age stratified perceived risk of heart disease declined significantly more (p less than .01) and age stratified perceived health status improved significantly more in North Karelia than in the reference area (p less than .005).
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, G Alfthan, J K Huttunen, P Puska (1984)  Association between serum selenium and the risk of cancer.   Am J Epidemiol 120: 3. 342-349 Sep  
Abstract: A matched-pair analysis was conducted with data based on a prospective six-year follow-up of a random population sample to study the association between serum selenium and the risk of cancer. Case-control pairs were from a population, after exclusions, of 8,113 persons examined in 1972 from two counties in eastern Finland. Cases were 31- to 59-year-old men and women initially free of cancer. One control was matched to each case according to age, gender, daily tobacco consumption, and serum cholesterol concentration. The mean serum selenium of the 128 cases was 50.5 micrograms/liter and that of the controls was 54.3 micrograms/liter (p = 0.012 for difference). When the residual variation in tobacco consumption and serum cholesterol as well as that in four other possible confounders was allowed for in a multiple logistic model, serum selenium of less than 45 micrograms/liter was associated with a relative risk of cancer of 3.1 (95% confidence interval, 1.5-6.7, p less than 0.01). These data support the hypothesis that selenium deficiency increases the risk of certain cancers in middle-aged persons.
Notes:
1983
 
PMID 
P Puska, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen, T E Kottke (1983)  Evaluating community-based preventive cardiovascular programs: problems and experiences from the North Karelia project.   J Community Health 9: 1. 49-64  
Abstract: Among the different approaches to the study of cardiovascular disease prevention are community-based programs. This type of program concerns a whole community and the intervention takes advantage of the existing service structure and community organization. The evaluation assesses the feasibility, effects on risk factor and disease reduction, costs, process, and other consequences associated with the program. Several such programs have recently been launched in the United States and some other countries. The first major community-based control program was the North Karelia project in Finland, started in 1972 and recently evaluated for its first five-year period. This paper discusses the problems in evaluating community-based CVD control programs on the experiences obtained in the North Karelia project.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska (1983)  Is there an association between serum cholesterol and blood pressure changes?   Acta Med Scand 214: 1. 49-54  
Abstract: A community-based programme to influence the risk factors of coronary heart disease was carried out in North Karelia, Eastern Finland in 1972-77. The evaluation, based on examination of large cross-sectional random samples at the outset and at the end of the period, showed a greater reduction in both serum cholesterol and blood pressure levels in North Karelia than in a matched reference area. A random cohort of 293 men and 321 women who were studied both in 1972 and in 1977 did not use antihypertensive drugs on either occasion. Among these people the change in blood pressure was positively associated with the change in serum cholesterol even when age, initial blood pressure, changes in body mass and number of blood pressure measurements were allowed for. This finding supports the hypothesis that changes in fat consumption lead to changes in blood pressure, but this hypothesis needs further investigation.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, A Tanskanen, J Virtamo, J Tuomilehto, J K Huttunen (1983)  Serum HDL cholesterol in a high coronary risk population in eastern Finland.   Acta Med Scand 213: 4. 255-261  
Abstract: The serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) and total cholesterol levels and their determinants were explored in a random population sample from eastern Finland, an area with an exceptionally high mortality and morbidity from coronary heart disease (CHD). A total of 1792 persons aged 14-65 years were studied. Serum HDL cholesterol was determined in one series by using an enzymatic method after precipitation by dextran-magnesium chloride. The mean serum HDL cholesterol was 1.41 mmol/l in men and 1.62 mmol/l in women. Although a multivariate linear regression model explained 21% (for men) and 28% (for women) of the variation in serum total cholesterol, the same variables were able to account for only 9 and 4%, respectively, of the variation in serum HDL cholesterol. Among men, obesity and the daily consumption of tobacco products were inversely associated and the weekly consumption of beer and age were directly associated with serum HDL cholesterol and the serum HDL cholesterol/total cholesterol ratio.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, A Nissinen (1983)  Intake of spirits and beer and risk of myocardial infarction and death--a longitudinal study in Eastern Finland.   J Chronic Dis 36: 7. 533-543  
Abstract: Intake of spirits and beer as well as smoking was measured by questionnaire in a random population sample from two counties of Eastern Finland in 1972. At the same time serum cholesterol, triglycerides and blood pressure were measured in a field examination. The study material consists of 4063 men aged 30-59 years (participation rate 92%). During a 7-yr follow-up 209 of these men had developed an acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and 223 men had died. Reported spirits and beer intake had both a strong positive association with smoking and serum triglycerides, a weak positive association with diastolic blood pressure, but no relationship to serum total cholesterol. Use of spirits at least once a week was associated with a reduced risk of AMI. The relative risk (RR), adjusted for age and conventional coronary risk factors was 0.5 (95% confidence interval (CI), 0.3-0.9). Consumption of beer had no significant relationship to the risk of AMI. Consumption of at least five bottles of beer a week was related to a slightly excessive risk of death from any cause (adjusted RR = 1.5, 95% CI = 1.0-2.1). Spirits intake had no significant association with the risk of death.
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PMID 
P Puska, J T Salonen, A Nissinen, J Tuomilehto, E Vartiainen, H Korhonen, A Tanskanen, P Rönnqvist, K Koskela, J Huttunen (1983)  Change in risk factors for coronary heart disease during 10 years of a community intervention programme (North Karelia project).   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 287: 6408. 1840-1844 Dec  
Abstract: A comprehensive community based programme to control cardiovascular diseases was started in North Karelia, Finland, in 1972. Reductions in smoking, serum cholesterol concentrations, and blood pressure were among the central intermediate objectives. The effect of the programme during the 10 year period 1972-82 was evaluated by examining independent random population samples at the outset (1972) and five (1977) and 10 (1982) years later both in the programme and in a matched reference area. Over 10 000 subjects were studied in 1972 and 1977 (participation rate about 90%) and roughly 8000 subjects in 1982 (participation rate about 80%). Analyses were conducted of the estimated effect of the programme on the risk factor population means by comparing the baseline and five year and 10 year follow up results in the age range 30-59 years. The effect of the programme (net reduction in North Karelia) at 10 years among the middle aged male population was estimated to be a 28% reduction in smoking (p less than 0.001), a 3% reduction in mean serum cholesterol concentration (p less than 0.001), a 3% fall in mean systolic blood pressure (p less than 0.001), and a 1% fall in mean diastolic blood pressure (p less than 0.05). Among the female population the reductions were respectively, 14% (NS), 1% (NS), 5% (p less than 0.001), and 2% (p less than 0.05). During the first five years of the project (1972-7) the programme effectively reduced the population mean values of the major coronary risk factors. At 10 years the effects had persisted for serum cholesterol concentrations and blood pressure and were increased for smoking.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, T E Kottke, J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen (1983)  Decline in mortality from coronary heart disease in Finland from 1969 to 1979.   Br Med J (Clin Res Ed) 286: 6381. 1857-1860 Jun  
Abstract: The trends in mortality from coronary heart disease in the 1970s and the differences in trends between counties within Finland were calculated from official mortality statistics among the population aged 35 to 64 years. During this period coronary mortality declined by a mean of 1.1% for men and 2.3% for women annually in the whole of Finland. A community based cardiovascular control programme was started in 1972 in North Karelia, a county in the east of Finland. The decline in coronary mortality in this county between 1969 and 1979 was 24% in men and 51% in women. The decline in the rest of Finland over the same period was 12% in men and 24% in women. The decline in North Karelia was greater than that in other counties of Finland for both men and women and that difference exceeded random variation, with over 95% likelihood for both sexes. Even with adjustment for rates before 1974 with cross-county multiple regression analyses the difference persisted. Although further studies are needed, the changes in coronary mortality in North Karelia suggest that the preventive programme has been effective.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska (1983)  Relation of serum cholesterol and triglycerides to the risk of acute myocardial infarction, cerebral stroke and death in eastern Finnish male population.   Int J Epidemiol 12: 1. 26-31 Mar  
Abstract: A random population sample from two countries of eastern Finland was studied in 1972, measuring eg the serum total cholesterol and triglycerides, blood pressure, and smoking. The participation rate among men aged 30 to 59 was 92%. Men who had had a myocardial infarction, angina or cerebral stroke in the preceding 12 months were excluded. During the seven-year follow-up 211 men had an acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 59 men had a cerebral stroke and 185 men died of any disease. The serum total cholesterol (greater than or equal to 8.0 mmol/l) had a positive association with the risk of AMI (relative risk RR = 2.8, 95% Cl = 1.8-4.3) and the risk of death (RR = 2.2, 95% Cl = 1.3-3.7) among men aged 30-49 but only with the risk of AMI (RR = 2.0, 95% Cl = 1.3-3.1) among those aged 50-59 based on multiple logistic models including also age, serum triglycerides, diastolic blood pressure, smoking and obesity. Serum triglycerides (greater than or equal to 2.8 mmol/l) had a positive risk factor-adjusted association with the risk of cerebral stroke (RR = 2.7, 95% Cl = 1.0-7.1) among men aged 30-49, but no independent association with the risk of AMI or death.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, A Tanskanen (1983)  Relation of blood pressure to reported intake of salt, saturated fats, and alcohol in healthy middle-aged population.   J Epidemiol Community Health 37: 1. 32-37 Mar  
Abstract: The association of blood pressure with reported intake of salt, saturated fats, and alcohol was studied in a sample of 8479 subjects based on a cross sectional survey in a population aged 30 to 64 years. A consistent association was found between the mean arterial pressure and the intake of alcohol (p less than 0.001) and saturated fats (p less than 0.01). There was also a weak association between blood pressure and dietary salt intake, but this association was mostly explained by the correlation of salt intake with alcohol and saturated fats. The observed relationships support the hypothesis that blood pressure is influenced by diet.
Notes:
1982
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Ylitalo (1982)  Antihypertensive, saluretic and hypokalaemic effects of cyclothiazide in comparison with hydrochlorthiazide with amiloride supplement.   Eur J Clin Pharmacol 22: 6. 495-499  
Abstract: The antihypertensive, saluretic and hypokalaemic effects of a small dose of cyclothiazide (2.5 mg daily) were compared with those of a conventional dose of an hydrochlorthiazide-amiloride hydrochloride combination (50 + 5 mg daily). Both preparations were given to 13 patients with mild (WHO I) hypertension in a cross-over manner for six weeks, with an intervening wash-out phase of three weeks. The antihypertensive efficacy of cyclothiazide was well comparable to that of the hydrochlorthiazide-amiloride combination, although cyclothiazide tended to inhibit renal sodium reabsorption less than the combination. Cyclothiazide tended to cause hypokalaemia, apparently due to increased potassium loss, but with the present dosage none of the 13 patients developed marked hypokalaemia (serum potassium less than 3.3 mmol/l). Both drugs led to a comparable increase in serum urate concentration. Neither of the preparations affected creatinine or free-water clearance. The results suggest that even in relatively small doses thiazides effectively decrease blood pressure, and combining thiazides with potassium-sparing diuretics is advantageous only in patients with marked hypokalaemia and its associated risks.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1982)  Oral contraceptives, smoking and risk of myocardial infarction in young women. A longitudinal population study in eastern Finland.   Acta Med Scand 212: 3. 141-144  
Abstract: The use of oral contraceptives (OC) and smoking habits were studied by using a questionnaire in a random population sample of women from two counties of Eastern Finland in 1972. The participation rate was 95%. Data on use of OC and smoking were collected for 2,653 women aged 35-49 years. During the next seven years, 27 of them had developed an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Smokers had a 2.6-fold (95% confidence interval (CI)=1.2-6.0) crude risk of developing AMI compared with non-smokers. Women taking OC had a 1.3-fold (95% CI = 0.4-6.9) risk of developing AMI compared with those who did not. Women who both smoked and used OC had a 7.2-fold (95% CI = 2.1-24.7) risk of AMI compared with non-smokers and non-users of OC. The results indicate that use of OC is associated with an excessive risk of AMI among female smokers.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A McAlister, P Puska, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto, K Koskela (1982)  Theory and action for health promotion illustrations from the North Karelia Project.   Am J Public Health 72: 1. 43-50 Jan  
Abstract: The North Karelia Project in Finland illustrates the fundamental goals of health promotion. Specific activities of the project serve as examples of how concepts from the social and behavioral sciences can be applied to achieve estimated reductions in predicted risk of disease. The results in North Karelia are not conclusive, but they are encouraging, and the investigations conducted there is an essential reference for future research in health promotion and disease prevention.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, R Palminteri (1982)  Comparison of two doses of betaxolol and placebo in hypertension: a randomized, double-blind cross-over trial.   Eur J Clin Pharmacol 23: 6. 491-494  
Abstract: Betaxolol is a cardioselective beta-blocker, which has a bioavailability of 90% and a T 1/2 of 20 h. A four group, cross-over double-blind trial was conducted to select between betaxolol 20 mg and 40 mg for long term trials. 60 patients were allocated randomly to one of the sequences placebo-20 mg, 20 mg-placebo, placebo-40 mg and 40 mg-placebo, each treatment lasting for 2 weeks. Groups were homogenous for baseline diastolic blood pressure (DBP), age and male/female ratio, and were slightly unbalanced for weight. A two-way ANOVA (3 treatments, 2 sequences) showed no treatment-sequence interaction nor sequence effect. The mean reduction in DBP was 14.2 +/- 1.8 mm Hg following 20 mg and 18.0 +/- 1.8 following 40 mg betaxolol, and 4.0 +/- 1.2 mm Hg during placebo (p less than 0.001). Age, weight, baseline DBP and duration of hypertension did not influence the treatment effect. The 95% confidence intervals of the reduction in DBP were 10.4 - 17.9 for 20 mg and 14.3 - 21.6 mm Hg for betaxolol 40 mg. Aiming at a mean reduction to 90 mm Hg, betaxolol 20 mg would appear to be adequate in similar patient populations.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, J Tuomilehto (1982)  Physical activity and risk of myocardial infarction, cerebral stroke and death: a longitudinal study in Eastern Finland.   Am J Epidemiol 115: 4. 526-537 Apr  
Abstract: Physical activity at work and in leisure time was studied by using a questionnaire in a random population sample from two counties of Eastern Finland in 1972. Data on age, serum cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, height, weight and smoking were recorded in a field examination. The study population consisted of 3978 men aged 30-59 years and 3688 women aged 35-59 years. The participation rate was 92% in men and 94% in women in these age groups. During the approximately seven-year follow-up until December 31, 1978, 210 men and 63 women had an acute myocardial infarction (AMI), 89 men and 14 women died of acute ischemic heart disease, 71 men and 56 women had a cerebral stroke and 172 men and 75 women died of any disease. The subjects with a history of myocardial infarction, angina or cerebral stroke in the 12 months preceding the baseline survey were excluded in the respective analysis. Low physical activity at work was associated with an increased risk of AMI, cerebral stroke and death due to any disease in both men and women, even when controlling for age, serum total cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, height, weight and smoking in a multiple logistic model. The relative risk of AMI was 1.5 (90% confidence interval (CI) = 1.2-2.0) in men and 2.4 (90% CI = 1.5-3.7) in women. Low physical activity in leisure time had a significant association with an increased risk of death, but not with an increased risk of AMI or stroke in the multivariate analysis.
Notes:
 
PMID 
K Aho, J T Salonen, P Puska (1982)  Autoantibodies predicting death due to cardiovascular disease.   Cardiology 69: 3. 125-129  
Abstract: A randomly sampled population aged from 25 to 59 years and examined in 1972 was monitored for 5 years. During that period, 126 deaths from cardiovascular causes occurred among subjects with no recent history of major cardiovascular diseases. A control matched for age, sex and the conventional cardiovascular risk factors was assigned to each of the deceased subjects from the same population at risk. Rheumatoid factors or antinuclear antibodies as determined from the baseline specimens were found among 21 of the deceased (20 in the discordant pairs), but only in 7 controls (6 in the discordant pairs). This corresponds to a relative risk of death due to cardiovascular causes of 3.3 (p less than 0.01).
Notes:
 
PMID 
E Vartiainen, P Puska, J T Salonen (1982)  Serum total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and blood pressure levels in 13-year-old children in Eastern Finland. The North Karelia Youth Project.   Acta Med Scand 211: 1-2. 95-103  
Abstract: North Karelia Youth Project is a community and school-based intervention study of 13-year-old schoolchildren in Eastern Finland. This paper deals with serum total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and blood pressure levels with some important background variables in the baseline survey in 1978. A total of 966 children were studied. A high mean serum serum cholesterol level (5.1 mmol/l) among both boys and girls was an outstanding finding. The cholesterol level was higher in the rural than urban areas. Different diet can explain this difference. Mean blood pressure was 117/67 mmHg among girls and 117/63 among boys. The high risk factor levels at this age support strongly the idea that the prevention of cardiovascular diseases should be started already in childhood.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1982)  Socioeconomic status and risk of cancer, cerebral stroke, and death due to coronary heart disease and any disease: a longitudinal study in eastern Finland.   J Epidemiol Community Health 36: 4. 294-297 Dec  
Abstract: The association of socioeconomic status with the risk of death from ischaemic heart disease and any disease as well as the risk of cerebral stroke and any cancer was studied in 3644 men aged 30-59, based on a random sample from the population of eastern Finland. Age, smoking, blood pressure, and serum cholesterol concentration were allowed for in multiple logistic models. On the basis of these data, not being married, short education, and low income are associated with an excessive risk of death from ischaemic heart disease and any disease. The data also indicated that men who were not married and who lived in urban areas might have an increased risk of cerebral stroke and those with a short education an increased risk of cancer.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, J Tuomilehto, K Homan (1982)  Relation of blood pressure, serum lipids, and smoking to the risk of cerebral stroke. A longitudinal study in Eastern Finland.   Stroke 13: 3. 327-333 May/Jun  
Abstract: The impact of blood pressure, serum cholesterol and triglycerides, and smoking on the risk of cerebral infarction and other stroke was studied by a longitudinal design. A random sample of the population aged 35-59 years in two counties of Eastern Finland was examined in 1972, with a participation rate of 92 per cent. In subjects (both sexes) standardized epidemiological measurements on blood pressure, height, weight, and serum lipids were made and questionnaire data were obtained on smoking. The cohort was followed for seven years by means of national hospital discharge and death certificate registers. During the follow-up 77 men and 65 women had a cerebral stroke. Based on multiple logistic risk function analysis, age, smoking, blood pressure, and history of previous stroke and diabetes turned out to be independent predictors of both cerebral infarction and other strokes in men. Diastolic blood pressure of 100 mm Hg or more was associated with a 1.9-fold (90% CI = 1.1-3.6) risk of cerebral infarction in men and 2.5-fold (90% CI = 1.1-5.6) risk in women with no previous stroke. In men 37% (90% CI = 21-53%) of all cerebral strokes were attributable to systolic blood pressure of 150 mm Hg or more and 27% (90% CI = 11-42%) to diastolic blood pressure of 95 mm Hg or more.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1982)  Risk of cancer and death in relation to serum cholesterol. A longitudinal study in an eastern Finnish population with high overall cholesterol level.   Am J Epidemiol 116: 4. 622-630 Oct  
Abstract: The relationship of the risk of cancer and death to total serum cholesterol was studied in a random population sample from two counties of Eastern Finland. Data on total serum cholesterol were recorded between February and April 1972 for 3745 men and 4221 women aged 30 to 59 years who had no history of cancer, diabetes, or cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease in the preceding 12 months. The participating rate in the survey was 92% in men and 94% in women. During six years from January 1, 1973 to December 31, 1978, cancer occurred in 65 men and 78 women at risk and 130 men and 52 women died of any disease. The risk of cancer bore no relationship to serum cholesterol either in men or in women. In men, the risk of death due to any disease and coronary heart disease rose steadily with increasing serum cholesterol from the level of 270 mg/dl (7.0 mmol/liter), whereas in women there was no association between serum cholesterol and the risk of death.
Notes:
 
PMID 
T E Kottke, P Puska, R Feldman, J T Salonen, J Tuomilehto (1982)  A decline in earning losses associated with a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention project.   Med Care 20: 7. 663-675 Jul  
Abstract: Permanent and temporary disability pension award data and survey data were used to estimate the lower bound of earning losses related to cardiovascular disease during a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention program in Eastern Finland. Earning losses due to death totaled $39.94 million but were not affected by the project. Earning losses due to permanent disability totalled +29.01 million and were $4.25 million less than expected (p less than 0.025). Earning losses due to temporary disability were $10.91 million and were not affected by the project. Total earning losses attributable to cardiovascular disease during the project period were $79.86 million, and total decline in earning losses was +4.25 million. Project implementation costs were less than one per cent of total earning losses and were equal to approximately 17 per cent of the decline in these losses attributable to the project. The findings suggest that community-based heart disease prevention programs have the potential of more than paying for themselves through an associated decline in lost earnings.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, G Alfthan, J K Huttunen, J Pikkarainen, P Puska (1982)  Association between cardiovascular death and myocardial infarction and serum selenium in a matched-pair longitudinal study.   Lancet 2: 8291. 175-179 Jul  
Abstract: A case-control study was conducted to investigate the association between serum selenium and risk of death from acute coronary heart disease (CHD) as well as risk of fetal and non-fetal myocardial infarction (MI). Case-control pairs came from a population of 11,000 persons examined in 1972 from two counties in eastern Finland, an area with an exceptionally high mortality from cardiovascular diseases. Cases were aged 35-59 years and had died of CHD or other CVD or had a non-fetal MI during a seven-year follow-up. Controls were matched for sex, age, daily tobacco consumption, serum cholesterol, diastolic blood pressure, and history of angina pectoris. The mean serum selenium concentration for all cases was 51.8 micrograms/l and for all controls 55.3 micrograms/l (p less than 0.01). Serum selenium of less than 45 micrograms/l was associated with an adjusted relative risk of CHD death of 2.9 (p less than 0.01, 95% CI, 1.4-6.0), a relative risk of CVD death of 2.2 (p less than 0.01, 95% CI, 1.2-4.0), and a relative risk of fatal and nonfatal MI of 2.1 (p less than 0.001, 95% Ci, 1.4-3.1). 22% (95% CI, 8-35%) of contrary deaths were attributable to serum selenium in the whole study population.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, I Vohlonen (1982)  Longitudinal cross-national analysis of coronary mortality.   Int J Epidemiol 11: 3. 229-238 Sep  
Abstract: In this study an attempt was made to investigate the application of epidemiological methodology in a cross-national context of studying the variation of coronary mortality. The data on the exposing factors of coronary mortality, the consumption of cigarettes and dairy products, were obtained from OECD statistics, and the data concerning the mortality of coronary heart disease were obtained from World Health Organization statistics. From the correlation and regression analyses performed on the basis of data from 14 countries it appeared that the cross-sectional exposure measurements strongly correlate over decades. For the consumption of cigarettes the time-lag found was from one to two years, while for the consumption of dairy products the respective time-lag was about six to eight years with respect to the effects on the coronary mortality. Because of the small number of observations available the statistical results should not be examined in terms of precise estimates of magnitude but rather in terms of the existence and the direction of relationship between the changes in coronary mortality and the consumption of cigarettes and dairy products. Although the data were insufficient to examine the confounding between the grouping of observations, and length of exposure, they did provide enough information to illustrate the importance of these two methodological aspects in analyses of populations.
Notes:
1981
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, T E Kottke, J Tuomilehto (1981)  Changes in smoking, serum cholesterol and blood pressure levels during a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention program--the North Karelia Project.   Am J Epidemiol 114: 1. 81-94 Jul  
Abstract: A comprehensive community-based program to control cardiovascular disease was carried out in North Karelia, Finland, in 1972--1977. Reductions in smoking, serum cholesterol and blood pressure (BP) levels were among the central intermediate objectives. The effect was evaluated by examining independent population samples at the outset and at the end, both in the program area and in a matched reference area. More than 10,000 subjects were studied each time (participation rate about 90%). This paper presents the analyses of the estimated effect of the program on the risk factor means by comparing the baseline and terminal situations among the population aged 30--59 years. The effect of the program among men was estimated to be a reduction of 13% in smoking, 4% in serum cholesterol and 3% in systolic and diastolic BP means. Among women, there was a net reduction of 5% in systolic BP and 4% in diastolic BP means. The net reductions in smoking (8%) and serum cholesterol (1%) among women were within sampling variation. It is concluded that the population means of the major coronary heart disease risk factors were reduced during the program more in the intervention area than in the reference area, and it seems likely that most of this difference was due to the program.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, T E Kottke, O P Heinonen (1981)  Coronary risk factor clustering patterns in eastern Finland.   Int J Epidemiol 10: 3. 203-210 Sep  
Abstract: A random population sample from Eastern Finland was studied. Altogether approximately 12 000 persons aged 25 to 59 years were examined with participation rate of 92%. Smoking, high saturated fat diet, increased serum cholesterol and elevated blood pressure showed clustering among men but not among women. Smoking tended to cluster in men with high saturated fat intake and hypercholesterolaemia. Increased serum cholesterol clustered with high blood pressure among both men and women. This risk factor clustering may contribute to the exceptionally high coronary heart disease incidence among men in the area. The reverse was true for women: smoking was less prevalent among women with elevated blood pressure or high saturated fat intake and did not differ by serum cholesterol.
Notes:
 
PMID 
A Nissinen, J Tuomilehto, J Elo, J T Salonen, P Puska (1981)  Implementation of a hypertension control program in the county of North Karelia, Finland.   Public Health Rep 96: 6. 503-513 Nov/Dec  
Abstract: A hypertension control program was established as part of the more comprehensive North Karelia Project. This project was started in 1972 in response to a petition from the population of North Karelia, a county in Finland, asking for national assistance to reduce the exceptionally high cardiovascular disease mortality and morbidity in the area. The North Karelia Project was carried out from 1972 to 1977.The hypertension control program was implemented mainly in local health centers by physicians and public health nurses, who followed guidelines issued by the project staff and worked under its supervision.Although the target population for the North Karelia Project was the entire population of North Karelia, the project focused on middle-aged men. The hypertension subprogram was introduced in steps. Its objectives included the training of health personnel, establishment of an information system in the county to educate people about hypertension, and organization of the detection, treatment, and followup of hypertensives. A hypertension dispensary was established in each of the 12 health centers in the county. Continuous training of the local public health nurses and physicians faciliated integration of the hypertension program into the operations of the health centers.A central hypertension register and the hypertension control clinics at the health centers were the essential tools in the systematic followup of hypertensives. Some 17,000 hypertensives were on the register by the end of the 5-year project.The main aim in providing health education about hypertension, as well as in treating hypertension itself, was to prevent severe cardiovascular diseases as a whole. Therefore the hypertension control program was integrated into the comprehensive cardiovascular disease control program, and hypertensives received advice concerning smoking and dietary changes as well as about high blood pressure.A survey of health care personnel in North Karelia and in a reference area showed that the care of hypertensives was more systematic in North Karelia and that its health care personnel were more satisfied with the cardiovascular disease care that was provided.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, O P Heinonen, T E Kottke, P Puska (1981)  Change in health behaviour in relation to estimated coronary heart disease risk during a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention programme.   Int J Epidemiol 10: 4. 343-354 Dec  
Abstract: The relationship between change in one coronary heart disease risk factor and levels of other risk factors was investigated in independent pre-and post-intervention samples and in a cohort surveyed both before and after a community-based cardiovascular disease prevention programme. A risk score that did not include the factor being analysed for change was developed and used to estimate risk. In the independent samples generally neither change in smoking nor change in saturated fat intake was related to coronary heart disease risk estimated from other factors in either men or women. Only the intake of saturated fats reduced slightly more among the hypertensive than other men (p less than 0.05). In the cohort, only change in smoking by women was related to initial risk estimated from other factors (p less than 0.05). Since change in behaviour had no consistent relation to the preprogramme risk level, it was concluded that health behaviour change in the population was based on common lifestyle changes in th intervention community, and that either face-to-face counselling or new techniques of mass communication are needed to induce high-risk individuals to do more to change their risk-inducing behaviours.
Notes:
1980
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska (1980)  A community programme for rehabilitation and secondary prevention for patients with acute myocardial infarction as part of a comprehensive community programme for control of cardiovascular diseases (North Karelia Project).   Scand J Rehabil Med 12: 1. 33-42  
Abstract: The comprehensive community programme for the control of cardiovascular diseases in North Karelia includes a special subprogramme for the rehabilitation and secondary prevention among patients with an acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The target group of the programme were persons under the age of 65 who had an AMI according to the community-based AMI register and had survived the acute phase of the disease. The programme consisted of systematic long-term medical follow-up at an outpatient MI clinic and of decentralized local group-rehabilitation with special emphasis on secondary prevention. The main component of the programme were health education and submaximal physical exercise, aiming at the reduction of the known secondary risk factors and the improvement of the general well-being of the patients. The feasibility of this programme was good. During the five-year period from 1973 to 1977 a total of 1308 persons under the age of 65 survived an AMI. Out of these patients 515 visited the outpatient MI clinic and 575 took part in the rehabilitation groups. The participation rate in the rehabilitation groups in the whole community increased during the period from 24% to 63%. During the programme period there was a reduction in incidence of recurrent infarctions and new vocational invalidity pensions among the patients with AMI.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J T Salonen (1980)  Stopping smoking and long-term mortality after acute myocardial infarction.   Br Heart J 43: 4. 463-469 Apr  
Abstract: A prospective follow-up study was carried out to investigate the relation between smoking and risk of death after an acute myocardial infarction. The study consisted of male patients under the age of 65 years, who had had an acute myocardial infarction between 1972 and 1975 in North Karelia, Finland. Of these patients, 888 survived the first six months after the acute infarction and were followed-up for three years after the infarction with regard to their deaths. The cumulative all-causes mortality rate of the patients who were still smoking six months after the acute myocardial infarction was 1.7 times that of the patients who had stopped smoking within the first six months. There was a dose-response relation between the number of cigarettes smoked daily and the mortality. The impact of smoking was greatest in the subgroups of patients with an otherwise good prognosis. We estimated that 28 per cent of the deaths in the whole group of initial smokers was attributable to continuing smoking after the infarction. On the basis of these findings we suggest that the anti-smoking advice should be an important part of the modern comprehensive care of patients with an acute myocardial infarction.
Notes:
 
PMID 
J Tuomilehto, A Nissinen, J T Salonen, T E Kottke, P Puska (1980)  Community programme for control of hypertension in North Karelia, Finland.   Lancet 2: 8200. 900-904 Oct  
Abstract: A community-based programme to improve awareness and control of hypertension was launched in 1972 in North Karelia. It was incorporated in the existing health-services system. An assessment five years later showed that, compared with a reference area not included in the programme, awareness of hypertension had improved, the prevalence of hypertension had dropped, levels of blood-pressure were lower by age-group, and the number of people on antihypertensive treatment had increased.
Notes:
1979
 
PMID 
J T Salonen, P Puska, H Mustaniemi (1979)  Changes in morbidity and mortality during comprehensive community programme to control cardiovascular diseases during 1972-7 in North Karelia.   Br Med J 2: 6199. 1178-1183 Nov  
Abstract: A comprehensive community programme studying the control of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) was carried out in North Karelia, Finland, between 1972 and 1977. The main objective was to reduce the mortality and morbidity of CVD, particularly in middle-aged men. Changes in the mortality and incidence of CVD were monitored by community-based registers of cases of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and stroke and data on death certificates. During the programme the total mortality in the area decreased by 5% and the mortality from CVD decreased by 13% among men and 31% among women aged 30-64 years. The incidence of AMI fell by 16% among men and 5% among women, while that of cerebral stroke fell by 38% among men and 50% among women. Changes in mortality in North Karelia were compared with those in a matched control area; the difference between the two areas was not significant. The true effect of the programme cannot be deduced from these results, but mortality from CVD and the incidence of AMI and stroke fell during the five years studied. Thus the changes in mortality and morbidity of CVD accorded with the initial objectives of the programme.
Notes:
 
PMID 
T E Kottke, J Tuomilehto, P Puska, J T Salonen (1979)  The relationship of symptoms and blood pressure in a population sample.   Int J Epidemiol 8: 4. 355-359 Dec  
Abstract: The relationships of symptoms and blood pressure were studied in a population sample of 1926 individuals. Analysis of covariance showed that none of the 13 symptoms was significantly related to systolic or diastolic BP. Symptoms were more strongly associated with confounding variables.
Notes:
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