Cardiovascular risk factors in a Mexican middle-class urban population. The Lindavista Study. Baseline data

The aim of this communication is to describe the cardiovascular risk factors affecting a Mexican urban middle-class population. A convenience sample of 2602 middle class urban subjects composed the cohort of the Lindavista Study, a prospective study aimed to determine if conventional cardiovascular...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archivos de cardiología de México 2013-10, Vol.83 (4), p.249-256
Hauptverfasser: Meaney, Alejandra, Ceballos-Reyes, Guillermo, Gutiérrez-Salmean, Gabriela, Samaniego-Méndez, Virginia, Vela-Huerta, Agustín, Alcocer, Luis, Zárate-Chavarría, Elisa, Mendoza-Castelán, Emma, Olivares-Corichi, Ivonne, García-Sánchez, Rubén, Martínez-Marroquín, Yolanda, Ramírez-Sánchez, Israel, Meaney, Eduardo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The aim of this communication is to describe the cardiovascular risk factors affecting a Mexican urban middle-class population. A convenience sample of 2602 middle class urban subjects composed the cohort of the Lindavista Study, a prospective study aimed to determine if conventional cardiovascular risks factors have the same prognosis impact as in other populations. For the baseline data, several measurements were done: obesity indexes, smoking, blood pressure, fasting serum glucose, total cholesterol, HDL-c, LDL-c and triglycerides. This paper presents the basal values of this population, which represents a sample of the Mexican growing urban middle-class. The mean age in the sample was 50 years; 59% were females. Around 50% of the entire group were overweighed, while around 24% were obese. 32% smoked; 32% were hypertensive with a 20% rate of controlled pressure. 6% had diabetes, and 14% had impaired fasting glucose; 66% had total cholesterol ≥ 200 mg/dL; 62% showed HDL-c levels150 mg/dL, and 34% levels of LDL-c ≥ 160 mg/dL. Half of the population studied had the metabolic syndrome. These data show a population with a high-risk profile, secondary to the agglomeration of several cardiovascular risk factors.
ISSN:1405-9940
DOI:10.1016/j.acmx.2013.05.002