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    Date Issued1991 (1)1990 (2)Author
    Chen, Z. Y. (3)
    Goldberg, Robert J. (3)Brady, P. (2)Dalen, James E. (2)Alpert, Joseph S. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (3)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordFemale (3)Humans (3)Male (3)Adult (2)Cardiology (2)View MoreJournalThe American journal of cardiology (2)American heart journal (1)

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    Duration of the QT interval and total and cardiovascular mortality in healthy persons (The Framingham Heart Study experience)

    Goldberg, Robert J.; Bengtson, J.; Chen, Z. Y.; Anderson, K. M.; Locati, E.; Levy, Daniel (1991-01-01)
    The baseline electrocardiograms of 5,125 original subjects of the Framingham Heart Study were measured to examine the relation of the QT interval corrected for heart rate (QTc) to risk of total mortality, sudden cardiac death, and death due to coronary artery disease over a 30-year follow-up period. Quintiles of QTc (seconds) less than or equal to 0.36, 0.36 to 0.38, 0.39 to 0.40, 0.41 to 0.43 and greater than or equal to 0.44 were studied in relation to these outcomes. There were no significant differences in the risk of total mortality, sudden cardiac death or death due to coronary artery disease according to QTc. A similar lack of significant association between QTc and these 3 outcomes was observed among all persons studied and in the 2 sexes after using a multiple regression analysis to control for several potentially confounding characteristics including age, gender, cigarette smoking, serum total cholesterol, systolic systemic blood pressure and Framingham relative weight. The results of this study fail to demonstrate an association between baseline QTc and overall mortality, and deaths due to sudden cardiac events or coronary artery disease in a large population-based cohort of essentially healthy persons in whom pathologic forms of QTc prolongation are uncommon.
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    Time of onset of symptoms of acute myocardial infarction

    Goldberg, Robert J.; Brady, P.; Muller, James E.; Chen, Z. Y.; de Groot, M.; Zonneveld, P.; Dalen, James E. (1990-07-15)
    Several studies have observed an increased occurrence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in the morning based on subjective self-reports and objective confirmation. Evidence has also been collected to suggest a circadian variation in the onset of sudden cardiac death and silent myocardial ischemia. No published reports have examined the time of onset of AMI in relation to time after awakening. The present study examines the times of onset of AMI in relation to awakening in 137 patients with confirmed AMI. Information concerning time of awakening on the day of AMI revealed a marked increase in the onset of initial AMI symptoms within the first hour after awakening. Of the patients studied, approximately 23% reported onset of the initial symptoms of AMI within 1 hour after awakening. An increased onset of symptoms of AMI soon after awakening was also observed when patients in whom the acute cardiac symptoms were known to or may have caused awakening were excluded from consideration. This was also noted in subgroups of AMI patients classified according to age, order and location of AMI. These results extend previous observations of the circadian morning increase of AMI onset and assist in narrowing the search for potential triggers of the circadian variation of onset of AMI to physiologic changes that may occur soon after awakening.
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    Impact of atrial fibrillation on the in-hospital and long-term survival of patients with acute myocardial infarction: a community-wide perspective

    Goldberg, Robert J.; Seeley, D.; Becker, Richard C.; Brady, P.; Chen, Z. Y.; Osganian, Voula; Gore, Joel M.; Alpert, Joseph S.; Dalen, James E. (1990-05-01)
    As part of an ongoing community-wide study examining changes over time in the incidence and survival rates of 4108 patients hospitalized with validated acute myocardial infarction (MI) in 16 hospitals in the Worcester, Massachusetts, metropolitan area during calendar years 1975, 1978, 1981, 1984, and 1986, we examined changes over time in the proportion of patients with acute MI developing atrial fibrillation (AF) and the impact of AF on in-hospital and long-term survival for up to a 10-year follow-up period. The overall percentage of patients with AF complicating acute MI was 16.0%; this proportion increased over time from 13.3% in 1975 to 14.8% in 1978, 14.9% in 1981, 20.3% in 1984, and to 17.7% in 1986. Patients with AF experienced consistently higher in-hospital case fatality rates than MI patients without AF overall (27.6% versus 16.6%), as well as during each of the 5 years under study. The independent effect of AF on in-hospital survival was not upheld, however, when a variety of potentially confounding prognostic factors were controlled for in a multivariate analysis resulting in an adjusted odds ratio (OR) of 1.18 (95% confidence interval 0.90, 1.52). Among discharged hospital patients, while the crude long-term survival rate for patients with AF was poorer than that of patients without AF for the combined as well as for individual study periods, similar to the in-hospital findings the independent effect of AF on long-term prognosis was not upheld after use of a multivariate analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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