50, CI 0.99
to 2.27). The association between HS and physical inactivity remained significant. Smoking, BMI and physical inactivity significantly increased FS HR. Table 3 Cox regression analysis including potential risk factors for stroke at 17-DMAG HSP-90 inhibitor baseline Table 4 Multivariate Cox regression analysis including potential risk factors for stroke at baseline Analysis of association between risk of stroke and BP levels showed associations. Systolic hypertension, 140–159 mm Hg, corresponding to grade 1 was not significantly associated with increased risk of stroke, whereas systolic hypertension, 160–179 mm Hg, corresponding to grade 2 showed a small non-significant increase (HR 1.35, CI 0.81 to 2.27). In contrast, systolic hypertension ≥180 mm Hg, corresponding to grade 3, showed a significantly higher risk of stroke compared with the reference group (HR 2.73, CI 1.62 to 4.60). Diastolic hypertension 90–99 mm Hg, corresponding to grade 1,
was significantly associated with increased risk of stroke (HR 1.41, CI 1.00 to 1.97) as was grade 2 hypertension 100–109 mm Hg (HR 1.65, CI 1.02 to 2.67) and grade 3 hypertension ≥110 mm Hg (HR 2.02, CI 1.05 to 3.89). The reference group was normotensive, that is, <140/<90 mm Hg. Analysis between stroke risk and continuous BP level showed a significant linear association with diastolic pressure, but a deviation from linearity was seen for low and high systolic pressure (figures 1 and and2).2). When comparing the risk of having one of the BP levels increased with both systolic and diastolic pressure levels increased, the analysis
showed significantly increased risk when both pressures were increased: grade 1 (HR 1.62, CI 1.17 to 2.25) and grade 2 hypertensions (HR 1.85, CI 1.19 to 2.88). Figure 1 Plot for the model-predicted risk of total stroke from a third-degree polynomial function of systolic blood pressure with age as a covariate. The prevalence of medication for hypertension at any time during the follow-up period was 30% higher in the group with grade 1 hypertension at baseline compared with the reference group <140/<90 mm Hg at baseline. MI, diabetes, AF and hypertension The 32-year survival Drug_discovery analyses showed significantly increased time free from stroke in individuals without concurrent diabetes (p<0.001), AF (p<0.001) and baseline hypertension (p=0.001), but not for MI (figure 3). Figure 3 Thirty-two-year survival curves, based on the Cox regression analysis of stroke with and without myocardial infarction, diabetes, atrial fibrillation and baseline hypertension, respectively. Discussion PSWG is a unique longitudinal population study of women in five age strata, and here we report data from 32 years of follow-up. A validation process increased subtype diagnoses considerably such that the total incidence of stroke was 184 cases (12.6%) of which 33(18%) were fatal.