Logo Logo
Hilfe
Hilfe
Switch Language to English

Jaeschke, Lina; Steinbrecher, Astrid; Greiser, Karin Halina; Doerr, Marcus; Buck, Thomas; Linseisen, Jakob; Meisinger, Christa; Ahrens, Wolfgang; Becher, Heiko; Berger, Klaus; Braun, Bettina; Brenner, Hermann; Castell, Stefanie; Fischer, Beate; Franzke, Claus-Werner; Gastell, Sylvia; Guenther, Kathrin; Hoffmann, Wolfgang; Holleczek, Bernd; Jagodzinski, Annika; Kaaks, Rudolf; Kluttig, Alexander; Krause, Gerard; Krist, Lilian; Kuss, Oliver; Lehnich, Anna-Therese; Leitzmann, Michael; Lieb, Wolfgang; Loeffler, Markus; Michels, Karin B.; Mikolajczyk, Rafael; Peters, Annette; Schikowski, Tamara; Schipf, Sabine; Schmidt, Boerge; Schulze, Matthias; Voelzke, Henry; Willich, Stefan N. und Pischon, Tobias (2020): Erfassung selbst berichteter kardiovaskulärer und metabolischer Erkrankungen in der NAKO Gesundheitsstudie: Methoden und erste Ergebnisse. In: Bundesgesundheitsblatt-Gesundheitsforschung-Gesundheitsschutz, Bd. 63, Nr. 4: S. 439-451

Volltext auf 'Open Access LMU' nicht verfügbar.

Abstract

Background: Data on self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic diseases are available for the first 100,000 participants of the population-based German National Cohort (GNC, NAKO Gesundheitsstudie). Objectives: To describe assessment methods and the frequency of self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic diseases in the German National Cohort. Materials and methods: Using a computer-based, standardized personal interview, 101,806 participants (20-75 years, 46% men) from 18 nationwide study centres were asked to use a predefined list to report medical conditions ever diagnosed by a physician, including cardiovascular or metabolic diseases. For the latter, we calculated sex-stratified relative frequencies and compared these with reference data. Results: With regard to cardiovascular diseases, 3.5% of men and 0.8% of women reported to have ever been diagnosed with a myocardial infarction, 4.8% and 1.5% with angina pectoris, 3.5% and 2.5% with heart failure, 10.1% and 10.4% with cardiac arrhythmia, 2.7% and 1.8% with claudicatio intermittens, and 34.6% and 27.0% with arterial hypertension. The frequencies of self-reported diagnosed metabolic diseases were 8.1% and 5.8% for diabetes mellitus, 28.6% and 24.5% for hyperlipidaemia, 7.9% and 2.4% for gout, and 10.1% and 34.3% for thyroid diseases. Observed disease frequencies were lower than reference data for Germany. Conclusions: In the German National Cohort, self-reported cardiovascular and metabolic diseases diagnosed by a physician are assessed from all participants, therefore representing a data source for future cardio-metabolic research in this cohort.

Dokument bearbeiten Dokument bearbeiten