PMID: 9553999Apr 29, 1998Paper

Antihypertensive treatment and serum cholesterol: results of population-based surveys in the German Cardiovascular Prevention Study

Reviews on Environmental Health
U Helmert, S Shea

Abstract

We analyzed the data from three cross-sectional, population-based surveys in West Germany to evaluate the effect of antihypertensive drug therapy on the level of serum cholesterol in German residents (18,344 males; 19,137 females) aged 25-69 years, after excluding persons with missing values (N = 5529) for any study variable. The data were obtained from the national and regional health surveys that were conducted during the years 1984-1992, within the framework of the German Cardiovascular Prevention Study (GCP). The response rates were between 66.0% and 71.4% for the national surveys and between 65.9% and 83.3% for the regional surveys. Blood-pressure and non-fasting cholesterol measurements were carried out under strictly standardized conditions. Multiple linear regression analysis was used to compare the age-adjusted mean value and prevalence for each of the following study variables: total serum cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, non-HDL cholesterol, and the ratio of HDL cholesterol/total cholesterol for users and non-users of antihypertensive medications. Antihypertensive medications were reportedly taken during the seven days preceding the survey examination by 7.8% of all males and 10.4% of all females. The beta-blocker type ...Continue Reading

References

Nov 1, 1976·The American Journal of Medicine·R P Ames, P Hill
Feb 14, 1986·The American Journal of Medicine·S W MacMahon, G J Macdonald
Jun 22, 1984·The American Journal of Medicine·J T Flaherty

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