Weight change and ischemic stroke risk among participants in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study.

IF 4 3区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Logan Cowan, Joana Tome, Cyrille Kouambo Beckodro, Pamela Lutsey, Kamakshi Lakshminarayan, Michel Johansen, Jakita Baldwin
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Abstract

Introduction Conflicting findings exist between weight change and ischemic stroke risk. Studying the association between body weight change and ischemic stroke risk helps clarify the true nature of the association and supports future health promotion and stroke prevention strategies. Methods We longitudinally assessed data from 10,985 ARIC visit 4 participants (1996-1998). After excluding individuals with missing data on previous stroke or coronary heart disease at baseline (visit 4), we classified 9-year weight change (visit 4 minus visit 1 weight) into quintiles of weight change and weight loss (> -2.7 kg), no change (-2.7 to +2.7 kg), and weight gain (> +2.7 kg) categories. We used crude and adjusted Cox regression models to assess ischemic stroke hazard. We also performed an analysis stratified by BMI status to see if the weight change-stroke risk relationship differed by baseline BMI. Results Among 9,574 participants, 676 developed ischemic stroke during the 20-year follow-up. Most participants at baseline were female (58.25%) and drinkers (50.52%), with mean age of 62 and mean BMI of 28.78 kg/m2. Compared to participants with no change, those who gained weight had 23% lower hazards of ischemic stroke (hazard ratio (HR) = 0.77 (95% confidence interval (CI) = 0.60, 0.99)), while those who lost weight had 30% higher hazards (HR=1.30 (95% CI =1.05,1.62)). Conclusion Weight change showed minimal association with stroke risk overall, with moderate weight gain potentially lowering the risk, while weight loss increased it. These results emphasize the intricate relationship between weight dynamics and cerebrovascular health and the potential complex implications of the degree and direction of weight change for stroke prevention.

社区动脉粥样硬化风险(ARIC)研究参与者的体重变化和缺血性卒中风险
体重变化与缺血性脑卒中风险之间存在矛盾的研究结果。研究体重变化与缺血性脑卒中风险之间的关系有助于澄清这种关系的真实性质,并为未来的健康促进和脑卒中预防策略提供支持。方法对1996-1998年10985名ARIC访视参与者的资料进行纵向评价。在排除了基线(第4次访问)时既往卒中或冠心病数据缺失的个体后,我们将9年的体重变化(第4次访问减去第1次访问的体重)分为体重变化和体重减轻(> -2.7 kg)、无变化(-2.7至+2.7 kg)和体重增加(> +2.7 kg)类别。我们使用粗糙和调整后的Cox回归模型来评估缺血性卒中的危险性。我们还进行了BMI分层分析,以观察体重变化与卒中风险的关系是否因基线BMI而异。在9574名参与者中,676人在20年的随访中发生了缺血性中风。基线时大多数参与者为女性(58.25%)和饮酒者(50.52%),平均年龄62岁,平均BMI为28.78 kg/m2。与没有变化的参与者相比,体重增加的参与者缺血性卒中的风险降低23%(风险比(HR) = 0.77(95%可信区间(CI) = 0.60, 0.99)),而体重减轻的参与者缺血性卒中的风险高出30% (HR=1.30 (95% CI =1.05,1.62))。结论体重变化与卒中风险的相关性很小,体重适度增加可能降低卒中风险,而体重减轻则会增加卒中风险。这些结果强调了体重动态与脑血管健康之间的复杂关系,以及体重变化的程度和方向对中风预防的潜在复杂影响。
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来源期刊
Neuroepidemiology
Neuroepidemiology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
9.90
自引率
1.80%
发文量
49
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Neuroepidemiology'' is the only internationally recognised peer-reviewed periodical devoted to descriptive, analytical and experimental studies in the epidemiology of neurologic disease. The scope of the journal expands the boundaries of traditional clinical neurology by providing new insights regarding the etiology, determinants, distribution, management and prevention of diseases of the nervous system.
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