Cardio Risk And Diseae Flashcards

1
Q

CVD- a public health challenge

A

CVD is the 2nd most common cause of death in the UK, according for total of around 155,000 deaths in 2014
2014, there were almost 41,000 premature deaths (<75 Years if age) that were caused by CVD (25% in men and 17% in women)
Major ethnic and socioeconomic differences in incidences and outcomes

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2
Q

CVD and mortality- UK

A

2014 CVD caused 27% of all death while cancer caused 29%
CHD biggest cause of death in UK (15% male, 10% female) total 69,000
Around 39,000 deaths from stroke 2014 (6% in men, 8% in female)
25% of male, 17% of female premature mortality was attributed to CVD in 2014

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3
Q

Morbidity- key facts 1

A

In the UK m, there were more than 1.6 million episodes related to CVD, 10% of male, 6.3% of female inpatients
401,000 CHD episodes in NHS
AMI accounted for about 1.2% in men and 0.5% in female episodes
187,000 AMI in UK

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4
Q

Morbidity- key facts 2

A

Stroke accounts for about 1% of all hospital episodes in the UK, higher among male than females More than 7 million people in UK with some form of CVD, 500,000 with HF, 1.1 mil with AF and 1.2 mil have stroke

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5
Q

CHD and Health Inequality

A

ETHNIC DIFFERENCES IN INCIDENCES: south Asians living in UK- 50% high premature death in male and 51% in female; black Caribbean- 35% lower CHD deaths rates than rest of population
LARGE REGIONAL DIFFERENCES: premature death in Scotland 50% higher in SW (80% higher in females)

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6
Q

CHD and health inequality 2

A

LARGE SOCIOECONOMIC DIFFERENCES: incidence and outcome e.g. CHD death rate 54% higher in manual workers than non-manual
MAJOR FACTORS IN REDUCED LIFE EXPECTANCY: people living in areas of worst deprivation indicators- for males CVD accounts for 35% of the gap in life expectancy for female 30% of the gap

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7
Q

Reasons for ethnic differences

A

Multifactorial- not all genetic
Differences in incidences of a number of CVD risk factors e.g. hypertension, cholesterol, BMI, exercise
Diabetes is a major factor- again partly genetic but also other risk factors e.g. exercise and diet

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8
Q

CVD treatment

A

2013, more than 300 mil prescriptions were dispensed for- CVD, more than 6x as many issues in 1972
More than £6.8 Bol was spent in treating CVD within the NHS England. 63% of these costs came within 2ndary care and 21% within primary care
% of total health expenditure which is spent on CVD within regions in England ranged from 7.9% in south east to 6.3% in London

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9
Q

Changes in death rates in the UK

A

CVD death rate falling- by 44% in <75 yr, cancer now major mortality cause in males
CHD falling- by 49% in men (55-64) and 26% men (35-44). Women 55% and no change
60% due to reduce risk factors and the rest to secondary prevention- main factor smoking

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10
Q

Risk factors for CVD- non- modify-able

A
  • The family history of premature CVD
  • Older age
  • Being male
  • Ethnic background
  • Co-morbidities that can increase the risk of developing CVD: hypertension; diabetes; CKD; dyslipidaemia; mental health problems
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11
Q

CVS risk factors modifiable

A
High BP 
Large amounts of non high density lipoprotein 
Smoking 
Obesity 
Insufficient physical activity 
Poor diet 
Psychosocial stress 
Excess alcohol consumption
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12
Q

Hypertension and CVD

A

Risk of CVD is directly related to higher levels of BP
Unhealthy diet is estimated to be responsible for half of hypertension with physical inactivity and obesity accounting for 20% each
Drug treatment and lifestyle changes, particularly weight loss, physical activity and dietary improvement, can effectively lower BP

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13
Q

Body weight and CVD

A
  • Overweight and obesity increases the risk of multiple diseases including CVD, cancer and type 2 diabetes
  • Adults with BMI of 25-30 are overweight and with a BMI of over 30 are obese. Both increase risk of morbidity and mortality
  • Abdominal obesity is a predisposing factor for CVD
  • WHO recommend cut off point (37 inch for men and 31 for women)
  • Ratio cut off point 0.9 for men and 0.85 female
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14
Q

Blood cholesterol and CVD

A
  • Blood cholesterol level is positively associated with CHD in both middle and old ages
  • Blood cholesterol levels can be reduced by physical activity, dietary and by drugs
  • HDL is an independent predictor of Cardiovascular risk, high level being protective and lower levels increasing the risk
  • NICE state to use non-HDL cholesterol levels as opposed to total/HDL cholesterol, as optimal predictor of CVD risk
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15
Q

CVD risk assessment

A

FARMINGHAM method- US data. Modified for UK application
QRISK2- UK data derived from medical practises; both assess risk of CVD over a 10 year period, both are estimates
NICE: risk <10% offer lifestyle advice; <10% than lifestyle advice and consider treatment of co-morbidity and offer atorvastatin 20mg daily if there are no complications (primary prevention- try to stop MI before it happens)

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16
Q

Framingham study- MUST LEARN

A

Began 1948-50 with 5209 participants; 2,873 women, 2,336 men; age 28-62 Years; 2/3rds of adult population reside in Framingham, MA
Evaluate over 50 Years follow up
1971, children and spouse recruited to offspring cohort (5124 people; 2642 women; 2483 men; age 5-70; offspring 3514)
3rd generation cohort comprises 4095 individuals
Each study participants are evaluated with medical histories, physican exam, lab tests, cognitive test batteries and brain

17
Q

QRISK2-2017

A

-2.3 million practise patient in England and Wales in 531 practise
-Multiple risk factors:
+Ethnicity, age, gender
+Treated hypertension; type 2 diabetes; renal; AF; rheumatoid arthritis
+Systolic BP (mmHg); total cholesterol and high density cholesterol, BMI
+Smoking status, 1st degree family history of CVD
+Townsend score (social deprivation)

18
Q

QRISK2-2017 and QRISK3- what’s the difference between them

A

QRISK3 includes more factors than QRISK2 to help enable doctors to identify those at most risk of heart disease and stroke
CKD; migraine; corticosteroid; systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE); atypical antipsychotics; severe mental illness; erectile dysfunction; systolic BP variability

QRISK3 won’t come in until some point in 2018

19
Q

Lifestyle- exercise

A

At least 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity aerobic activity
Or
At least 75 minutes per week of vigorous intensity aerobic
A mix of moderate and vigorous aerobic activity
Muscle-strengthening activities on 2 or more days a week that work all major muscle groups (legs, hip, back, abdomen, chest, shoulder and arms)

20
Q

Diet- the 5 a day approach

A
  • Total fat intake should be 30% or less of total energy intake, and saturated fat <7%
  • Eat at least 5 portions of fruit and veg per day, eat at least 2 portions of fish per week
  • Eat wholegrain varieties of cereals, breads and other starchy foods, minimise intake of food containing refined sugars
  • Keep salt intake low
  • No evidence for dietary supplements including omega-3 capsules, plant sterols or supplement foods
21
Q

Weight and alcohol intake

A

Weight: Aim for BMI <25
-Alcohol intake
+Unit guidelines are the same or men and women= 14 units per week
+Spread evenly across the week
+If you want to cut down the amount you drink- have several free days
+The chief medical officer (CMO) guidance is the pregnant women should not drunk any alcohol at all
+If you are pregnant or planning pregnancy, the safest option is not to drink alcohol
+This is to keep the risk to the baby to a minimum. The more you drink the greater the risk is