The American journal of the medical sciences
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The Jackson Heart Study is a partnership among Jackson State University, Tougaloo College, the University of Mississippi Medical Center and the National Institutes of Health's National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) and Office of Research on Minority Health. The purposes of the study are to: (1) establish a single-site cohort study to identify the risk factors for the development of cardiovascular diseases, especially those related to hypertension, in African American men and women; (2) build research capabilities in minority institutions by building partnerships; (3) attract minority students to careers in public health and epidemiology; and (4) establish an NHLBI Field Site in Jackson, Mississippi, similar to those established for the Framingham Heart Study and the Honolulu Heart Program. ⋯ The study will have a sample size of approximately 6,500 men and women aged 35-84 years and will include approximately 400 families. Exam 1 is scheduled to take place in the spring of the year 2000.
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Hypertension is the most common reversible risk factor for cardiovascular disease. It is especially common in African Americans. One of the factors that may contribute to the high rates of hypertension and target organ injury in African Americans is obesity. ⋯ Most research thus far has focused on blood pressure control systems studied in other forms of hypertension, including the sympathetic nervous system, the renin angiotensin system, and metabolic factors-primarily insulin resistance. Proposed mechanisms that are unique to obesity-associated hypertension include: 1) intrarenal physical forces associated with obesity-induced changes in the renal medulla; 2) genetic/metabolic factors; and 3) metabolic effects of abdominal visceral fat. The Jackson Heart Study provides a unique opportunity to address unresolved questions in the relationship of body weight, blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease.
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The Jackson Heart Study will be an epidemiological study of African Americans in Jackson, Mississippi, to identify risk factors for development and progression of cardiovascular disease. One of the potential risk factors to be assessed in this study is renal vascular disease. Atherosclerotic renal vascular disease is a disease of the elderly, is predominantly seen in white people, and is strongly associated with diffuse atherosclerotic disease and high-grade hypertensive retinopathy. ⋯ Diabetic patients fair less well with intervention and have a higher progression to end-stage renal disease or death. Obesity is not commonly seen in patients with renal vascular disease. The Jackson Heart Study may be able to assess the true incidence of atherosclerotic renal vascular disease in African Americans and its impact of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
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The importance of traditional coronary artery disease risk factors in the development of coronary heart disease is well known. African Americans have a higher prevalence of such risk factors as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, obesity, cigarette smoking, and left ventricular hypertrophy, which might account for the disproportionate rate of coronary heart disease mortality in African Americans. Compelling data from randomized lipid-lowering trials show conclusively that lowering cholesterol levels, specifically low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, lowers coronary heart disease morbidity and mortality. ⋯ Diabetes mellitus, cigarette use, physical inactivity, stress, and obesity play critical roles collectively and individually in increasing coronary heart disease, morbidity, and mortality. Clustering of coronary heart disease risk factors in African Americans must be strongly considered to play a critical role in the excess mortality from coronary heart disease seen in African Americans. New innovative approaches are required if the course of coronary heart disease is to be altered.
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Although there is widespread recognition of a region with high stroke mortality in the southeastern United States that has persisted over the past 50 years (ie, the "stroke belt"), there is little agreement as to its underlying cause(s). Herein, we review data supporting 10 potential causes for the stroke belt, and assess: (1) the likelihood that each is the contributing factor to the excess mortality, and (2) areas of investigation where data are lacking and that require additional research efforts.