Information de reference pour ce titreAccession Number: | 00000605-199801150-00002.
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Author: | Bucher, Heiner C. MD, MPH; Griffith, Lauren E. MS; Guyatt, Gordon H. MD, MSc
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Institution: | Ann Intern Med. 1998;128:89-95. From Kantonsspital Basel, Basel, Switzerland; and McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. For current author addresses, see end of text.
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Title: | |
Source: | Annals of Internal Medicine. 128(2):89-95, January 15, 1998.
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Abstract: | Background: Stroke is a leading cause of death in the industrialized world, and hypercholesterolemia may be a risk factor for stroke.
Objective: To determine whether reducing cholesterol levels with HMGcoA (3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A) reductase inhibitors or other antilipidemic interventions reduces risk for nonfatal and fatal stroke.
Data Sources: A systematic search in the MEDLINE and EMBASE databases of the English-language and non-English-language literature published from 1966 through October 1996.
Study Selection: All randomized, controlled trials of any cholesterol-lowering intervention that reported data on nonfatal and fatal strokes, on death from coronary heart disease, and on overall mortality were included. Whether treatment effects differed according to the type of cholesterol-lowering intervention used was investigated.
Data Extraction: Trials were reviewed for methods, inclusion and exclusion criteria, and outcomes.
Data Synthesis: 28 trials (for a total of 49 477 study participants in the intervention group and 56 636 participants in the control group) were included. The risk ratio for nonfatal and fatal stroke with HMGcoA reductase inhibitors was 0.76 (95% CI, 0.62 to 0.92; test of heterogeneity, P > 0.2). The risk ratios for nonfatal and fatal stroke with fibrates, resins, and dietary interventions were all close to 1.0, and the difference between the HMGcoA reductase inhibitor effect and the pooled estimate for all other interventions would, under the null hypothesis, be unlikely to occur by chance (P = 0.01). Trials with HMGcoA reductase inhibitors also showed reductions in rates of death from coronary heart disease and overall mortality.
Conclusion: This meta-analysis of randomized, controlled trials suggests that in hyperlipidemic patients who have not previously had stroke, HMGcoA reductase inhibitors reduce the incidence of stroke.
(C) 1998 American College of Physicians
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Language: | English.
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Document Type: | Articles.
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Journal Subset: | Clinical Medicine.
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ISSN: | 0003-4819
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NLM Journal Code: | 0372351, 5a6
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