Background: Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are still the leading cause of death in developed countries. The aim of this study was to calculate the potential for CV risk reduction when using three different prevention strategies to evaluate the effect of primary prevention. Methods: A total of 931 individuals aged 20–79 years old from the Bialystok PLUS Study were analyzed. The study population was divided into CV risk classes. The Systematic Coronary Risk Estimation (SCORE), Framingham Risk Score (FRS), and LIFE-CVD were used to assess CV risk. The optimal prevention strategy assumed the attainment of therapeutic goals according to the European guidelines. The moderate strategy assumed therapeutic goals in participants with increased risk fa...
Abstract Background Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) caused 17.9 million deaths worldwide in 2016, bein...
WOS: 000182687700012PubMed ID: 12769254Background: The extent of cardiovascular risk reduction by im...
Aims The aim of this study was to determine whether the Joint European Societies guidelines on seco...
textabstractBackground-Evidence shows that healthy diet, exercise, smoking interventions, and stress...
AIMS: To estimate the potential effectiveness of different "high-risk" and "population" approaches t...
Background Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention is commonly focused on providing individuals at h...
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) remain the leading cause of morbimortality globally. Despite substanti...
Background-Evidence shows that healthy diet, exercise, smoking interventions, and stress reduction r...
Objective There is no evidence that systematic screening and risk factor modification in an unselect...
Background Cardiovascular disease is responsible for 31% of all glob...
In recent years there is a positive trend in the development of preventive medicine, in particular, ...
Background: The extent of cardiovascular risk reduction by implementing coronary prevention guidelin...
Background Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention is commonly focused on providing individuals at h...
BACKGROUND: The additional benefit of lifestyle interventions in patients receiving cardioprotective...
textabstractWhereas secondary prevention of cardiovascular events through risk factor modification i...
Abstract Background Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) caused 17.9 million deaths worldwide in 2016, bein...
WOS: 000182687700012PubMed ID: 12769254Background: The extent of cardiovascular risk reduction by im...
Aims The aim of this study was to determine whether the Joint European Societies guidelines on seco...
textabstractBackground-Evidence shows that healthy diet, exercise, smoking interventions, and stress...
AIMS: To estimate the potential effectiveness of different "high-risk" and "population" approaches t...
Background Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention is commonly focused on providing individuals at h...
Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) remain the leading cause of morbimortality globally. Despite substanti...
Background-Evidence shows that healthy diet, exercise, smoking interventions, and stress reduction r...
Objective There is no evidence that systematic screening and risk factor modification in an unselect...
Background Cardiovascular disease is responsible for 31% of all glob...
In recent years there is a positive trend in the development of preventive medicine, in particular, ...
Background: The extent of cardiovascular risk reduction by implementing coronary prevention guidelin...
Background Cardiovascular disease (CVD) prevention is commonly focused on providing individuals at h...
BACKGROUND: The additional benefit of lifestyle interventions in patients receiving cardioprotective...
textabstractWhereas secondary prevention of cardiovascular events through risk factor modification i...
Abstract Background Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) caused 17.9 million deaths worldwide in 2016, bein...
WOS: 000182687700012PubMed ID: 12769254Background: The extent of cardiovascular risk reduction by im...
Aims The aim of this study was to determine whether the Joint European Societies guidelines on seco...