Biochemia Medica, Vol. 18 No. 3, 2008.
Original scientific paper
Body mass index in patients with positive or suspected coronary artery disease: a large Croatian cohort
Daria Pašalić
orcid.org/0000-0002-5741-6168
; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Zagreb University School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
Goran Ferenčak
; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Zagreb University School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia; Clinical Institute of Laboratory Diagnosis, Zagreb University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia
Branka Gršković
; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Zagreb University School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
Ana Stavljenić-Rukavina
; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Zagreb University School of Medicine, Zagreb, Croatia
Abstract
Background: BMI is one of the measures used in clinical epidemiological studies as well as in clinical diagnosis of obesity. Obesity and BMI have been implicated as independent risk factors for CAD. On contrary, the relationship between BMI and CAD may be absent or sometimes shows the "obesity paradox". The aim of the study presented was to determine the distribution of BMI in Croatian patients with confirmed or suspected coronary artery disease.
Materials and methods: 728 Croatian patients who underwent coronary angiography were involved in the study. The concentrations of glucose, lipid parameters, homocysteine and fibrinogen were determined with standard methods. BMI was calculated after measurement of body weight and height.
Results: There were no signiLcant diferences between three BMI-catego-ries for CAD(+) and CAD(-) patients, neither for the patients with and without diabetes or smokers/non-smokers. In CAD(+) group, there was no relation between myocardial infarction (MI) and BMI, but there was signiLcantly more obese patients with arterial hypertension (P = 0.005). Though statistically signiLcant, diferences in plasma cholesterol (P = 0.001), HDL-cholesterol (P < 0.001), apolipoprotein A-I (P < 0.001) and triglyceride (P = 0.002) concentrations between normal, overweight and obese patients were clinically irrelevant. No signiLcant correlations were observed between HDL-cholesterol, Apo A-I, triglycerides and hypertension with BMI.
Conclusions: In patients with positive or suspected coronary artery disease, BMI is not associated with CAD or with other studied CAD-risk factors with the exception of hypertension.
Keywords
body mass index; coronary artery disease; risk factors
Hrčak ID:
27336
URI
Publication date:
6.10.2008.
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