The relation between socio-economical status (SES) and cardiovascular diseases has been extensively addressed. We assessed the association between the main lifelong occupation reported by the participants of the IMPROVE study (3711 subjects from 5 European countries, age 55-70) and their carotid intima-media thickness (c-IMT) measurement. Jobs were ranked in 5 categories in a scale of SES (labourers, housewives, service workers, white collars, professionals). This scale was highly correlated with education level (r=0.46, P<.0001) and the categories were associated with different grades of physical activity (P<.0001). Mean c-IMT was strongly associated with job type, exhibiting an inverse relation with SES (Fig. 1). This association remained highly significant after adjustment for relevant confounders, with a difference of -8.3% from the lowest to the highest job category (P for trend <.0001). The negative trend was observed in both genders and was independent from education level, diet, alcohol intake and latitude. Of interest, employment in manual jobs, although characterized by a high level of physical activity, was associated with the highest IMT measures. In analogy to what observed for other important pathologies, our results show that the type of job is a strong determinant of subclinical atherosclerosis. This relation is not completely explained neither by differences in conventional risk factors among job categories, nor by the major life-style or cultural variables (education, smoke, diet and physical activity).

Strong association between subclinical atherosclerosis and type of occupation in 3711 high risk European individuals / F. Veglia, C.C. Tedesco, K. Nyyssönen, D. Baldassarre, M. Amato, R. Rauramaa, U. de Faire, A. Hamsten, A.J. Smit, E. Mannarino, S. Humphries, P. Giral, E. Tremoli. - In: EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL. - ISSN 0195-668X. - 30:Suppl. 1(2009 Sep), pp. 521-521. (Intervento presentato al convegno ESC CONGRESS 2009 tenutosi a Barcellona nel 2009).

Strong association between subclinical atherosclerosis and type of occupation in 3711 high risk European individuals

F. Veglia;D. Baldassarre;E. Tremoli
2009

Abstract

The relation between socio-economical status (SES) and cardiovascular diseases has been extensively addressed. We assessed the association between the main lifelong occupation reported by the participants of the IMPROVE study (3711 subjects from 5 European countries, age 55-70) and their carotid intima-media thickness (c-IMT) measurement. Jobs were ranked in 5 categories in a scale of SES (labourers, housewives, service workers, white collars, professionals). This scale was highly correlated with education level (r=0.46, P<.0001) and the categories were associated with different grades of physical activity (P<.0001). Mean c-IMT was strongly associated with job type, exhibiting an inverse relation with SES (Fig. 1). This association remained highly significant after adjustment for relevant confounders, with a difference of -8.3% from the lowest to the highest job category (P for trend <.0001). The negative trend was observed in both genders and was independent from education level, diet, alcohol intake and latitude. Of interest, employment in manual jobs, although characterized by a high level of physical activity, was associated with the highest IMT measures. In analogy to what observed for other important pathologies, our results show that the type of job is a strong determinant of subclinical atherosclerosis. This relation is not completely explained neither by differences in conventional risk factors among job categories, nor by the major life-style or cultural variables (education, smoke, diet and physical activity).
English
Settore BIO/14 - Farmacologia
Articolo
Comitato scientifico
set-2009
Oxford University Press
30
Suppl. 1
521
521
1
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
ESC CONGRESS 2009
Barcellona
2009
European Society of Cardiology
Convegno internazionale
Intervento inviato
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Strong association between subclinical atherosclerosis and type of occupation in 3711 high risk European individuals / F. Veglia, C.C. Tedesco, K. Nyyssönen, D. Baldassarre, M. Amato, R. Rauramaa, U. de Faire, A. Hamsten, A.J. Smit, E. Mannarino, S. Humphries, P. Giral, E. Tremoli. - In: EUROPEAN HEART JOURNAL. - ISSN 0195-668X. - 30:Suppl. 1(2009 Sep), pp. 521-521. (Intervento presentato al convegno ESC CONGRESS 2009 tenutosi a Barcellona nel 2009).
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
13
262
Article (author)
Periodico con Impact Factor
F. Veglia, C.C. Tedesco, K. Nyyssönen, D. Baldassarre, M. Amato, R. Rauramaa, U. de Faire, A. Hamsten, A.J. Smit, E. Mannarino, S. Humphries, P. Giral, E. Tremoli
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/232919
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