relation between 20-year mortality and Wood pressure in 52,064 participants aged SO-BS years at examination was analyzed. Increased blood pressure was related to increased mortality from coronary heart disease, stroke, and all causes in all age groups except the oldest, where a more irregular pattern was present. The relative risks decreased with age at screening, while the absolute increase in mortality with increasing Wood pressure was greatest in persons aged 60-69 or 70-79 years at screening. A log-linear relation between systolic blood pressure and coronary heart disease and stroke mortality was seen in both men and women. An upturn in total mortality at low systolic Wood pressures was suggested in the groups aged 60 years or more at s...
Background: It is well established that high blood pressure (BP) increase the risk of death from car...
Background Age, sex, and blood pressure could modify the associations of total cholesterol (and its ...
There are indications that in persons of older age, systolic blood pressure (SBP) is no longer assoc...
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate at a population level whether hypertension is a r...
Background: The relation between high blood pressure (BP) and mortality risk in older individuals (a...
The age-specific relevance of blood pressure to cause-specific mortality is best assessed by collabo...
Objective: To investigate age-related shifts in the relative importance of SBP and DBP as predictors...
Many studies of blood pressure in the elderly have found higher death rates in groups with the lowes...
Higher diastolic pressure predicted better survival in men 75 years or older in two prior analyses i...
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate at a population level whether hypertension is a...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate whether pulse pressure is an independent risk factor for corona...
The aim of this work was to evaluate whether pulse pressure (PP) in elderly people is a better predi...
There is uncertainty about the relation between blood pressure and vascular disease at older age. We...
The association between low systolic blood pressure (SBP) and vascular diseases is unclear. The aim ...
The aim of the CASTEL, a population-based (n=3282) prospective study which began 14 years ago, was t...
Background: It is well established that high blood pressure (BP) increase the risk of death from car...
Background Age, sex, and blood pressure could modify the associations of total cholesterol (and its ...
There are indications that in persons of older age, systolic blood pressure (SBP) is no longer assoc...
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate at a population level whether hypertension is a r...
Background: The relation between high blood pressure (BP) and mortality risk in older individuals (a...
The age-specific relevance of blood pressure to cause-specific mortality is best assessed by collabo...
Objective: To investigate age-related shifts in the relative importance of SBP and DBP as predictors...
Many studies of blood pressure in the elderly have found higher death rates in groups with the lowes...
Higher diastolic pressure predicted better survival in men 75 years or older in two prior analyses i...
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate at a population level whether hypertension is a...
The aim of this paper is to evaluate whether pulse pressure is an independent risk factor for corona...
The aim of this work was to evaluate whether pulse pressure (PP) in elderly people is a better predi...
There is uncertainty about the relation between blood pressure and vascular disease at older age. We...
The association between low systolic blood pressure (SBP) and vascular diseases is unclear. The aim ...
The aim of the CASTEL, a population-based (n=3282) prospective study which began 14 years ago, was t...
Background: It is well established that high blood pressure (BP) increase the risk of death from car...
Background Age, sex, and blood pressure could modify the associations of total cholesterol (and its ...
There are indications that in persons of older age, systolic blood pressure (SBP) is no longer assoc...