Liver Diseases And Disorders |
Alagille Syndrome; Arteriohepatic Dysplasia; Bile ducts paucity, syndromic form; Jaundice; Liver; Liver Diseases; Liver Diseases (General) |
Clinical Trial: Coronary Artery Calcium, Exercise Tests, and CHD Outcome
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
Purpose
To investigate coronary artery calcium (CAC), detected by electron beam computed tomography (EBCT), as a predictor of coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality and morbidity, stroke, and all-cause mortality in a historical cohort epidemiological study.
| Condition |
|---|
| Cardiovascular Diseases Coronary Disease Cerebrovascular Disorders Heart Diseases Cerebrovascular Accident |
MedlinePlus related topics: Coronary Disease; Heart Diseases; Heart Diseases--Prevention; Stroke; Vascular Diseases
Study Type: Observational
Study Design: Natural History, Defined Population
Study start: September 1999; Study completion: August 2005
BACKGROUND: Dramatic advances in medical and interventional treatment of clinically overt CHD have contributed substantially, perhaps predominately, to the decline over the past three decades in CHD mortality that has occurred despite relatively unchanged rates of myocardial infarction. By analogy, it is attractive to assume that substantial benefit could also be given to individuals with significant but asymptomatic coronary artery disease if only they could be accurately diagnosed. In this context, research to determine whether or not a non-invasive method like EBCT has sufficient independent predictive value for CHD events to play a useful role in this process has potentially considerable clinical and public health importance.
DESIGN NARRATIVE: Follow-up of the 5,400 women and 12,600 men will be for an average of about 2.75 years with approximately 15,000 woman-years and 35,000 man-years of observations being available for analyses by June 30, 2000. An important strength of the study is the self-reported key health variables at baseline for all study participants. In addition, objective measures of blood pressure, total cholesterol, HDL- cholesterol, triglyceride, plasma glucose, resting and exercise electrocardiograms (ECG), maximal health rates, cardiorespiratory fitness, and other clinical and biochemical measurements are available for about half of the participants. CAC by EBCT has been associated with prevalent CHD and with incident CHD in recent small prospective studies. However, it is unclear whether CAC is predictive of MI or CHD deaths, because currently available studies had few individuals with evidence of hard CVD endpoints. The large cohort with CAC measurements provides the power to investigate an association between CAC and CHD morbidity, stroke, and all- cause mortality in terms of thresholds or dose-response effects. Exercise test results and measures of conventional CHD risk factors, including several health behaviors and biochemical markers, are available for about 50 percent of the participants. This will allow evaluation of the separate and independent predictive value of CAC and exercise test results and the combination of these two exposures in relation to study outcomes. Furthermore, CAC scores, exercise test results, and the presence of conventional risk factors will be used together to identify participants at the highest risk of developing CHD outcomes.
Eligibility
Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Criteria
Location Information
Milton Nichaman, Cooper Institute for Aerobics Research
More Information
Publications
Wei M, Schwertner HA, Blair SN. The association between physical activity, physical fitness, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Compr Ther. 2000 Fall;26(3):176-82. Review.
Wei M, Gibbons LW, Mitchell TL, Kampert JB, Blair SN. Alcohol intake and incidence of type 2 diabetes in men. Diabetes Care. 2000 Jan;23(1):18-22.
Wei M, Gibbons LW, Kampert JB, Nichaman MZ, Blair SN. Low cardiorespiratory fitness and physical inactivity as predictors of mortality in men with type 2 diabetes. Ann Intern Med. 2000 Apr 18;132(8):605-11.
Blair SN, Nichaman MZ. The public health problem of increasing prevalence rates of obesity and what should be done about it. Mayo Clin Proc. 2002 Feb;77(2):109-13. Review. No abstract available.
Nguyen-Duy TB, Nichaman MZ, Church TS, Blair SN, Ross R. Visceral fat and liver fat are independent predictors of metabolic risk factors in men. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2003 Jun;284(6):E1065-71. Epub 2003 Jan 28.
Cheng YJ, Church TS, Kimball TE, Nichaman MZ, Levine BD, McGuire DK, Blair SN. Comparison of coronary artery calcium detected by electron beam tomography in patients with to those without symptomatic coronary heart disease. Am J Cardiol. 2003 Sep 1;92(5):498-503.
Blair SN, LaMonte MJ, Nichaman MZ. The evolution of physical activity recommendations: how much is enough? Am J Clin Nutr. 2004 May;79(5):913S-920S. Review.
Wong SL, Katzmarzyk P, Nichaman MZ, Church TS, Blair SN, Ross R. Cardiorespiratory fitness is associated with lower abdominal fat independent of body mass index. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2004 Feb;36(2):286-91.
Kuk JL, Nichaman MZ, Church TS, Blair SN, Ross R. Liver fat is not a marker of metabolic risk in lean premenopausal women. Metabolism. 2004 Aug;53(8):1066-71.
Lee S, Janssen I, Ross R. Interindividual variation in abdominal subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue: influence of measurement site. J Appl Physiol. 2004 Sep;97(3):948-54. Epub 2004 Apr 30.
Record last reviewed: January 2005
Last Updated: January 21, 2005
Record first received: May 25, 2000
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00005562
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005
Resources
- 50 Ways to Love Your Liver (American Liver Foundation)
- Acute Liver Failure in the United States (American College of Physicians)

Not Signed In -

