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Abstract
Summary
Background
Published work assessing psychosocial stress (job strain) as a risk factor for coronary
heart disease is inconsistent and subject to publication bias and reverse causation
bias. We analysed the relation between job strain and coronary heart disease with
a meta-analysis of published and unpublished studies.
Methods
We used individual records from 13 European cohort studies (1985–2006) of men and
women without coronary heart disease who were employed at time of baseline assessment.
We measured job strain with questions from validated job-content and demand-control
questionnaires. We extracted data in two stages such that acquisition and harmonisation
of job strain measure and covariables occurred before linkage to records for coronary
heart disease. We defined incident coronary heart disease as the first non-fatal myocardial
infarction or coronary death.
Findings
30 214 (15%) of 197 473 participants reported job strain. In 1·49 million person-years
at risk (mean follow-up 7·5 years [SD 1·7]), we recorded 2358 events of incident coronary
heart disease. After adjustment for sex and age, the hazard ratio for job strain versus
no job strain was 1·23 (95% CI 1·10–1·37). This effect estimate was higher in published
(1·43, 1·15–1·77) than unpublished (1·16, 1·02–1·32) studies. Hazard ratios were likewise
raised in analyses addressing reverse causality by exclusion of events of coronary
heart disease that occurred in the first 3 years (1·31, 1·15–1·48) and 5 years (1·30,
1·13–1·50) of follow-up. We noted an association between job strain and coronary heart
disease for sex, age groups, socioeconomic strata, and region, and after adjustments
for socioeconomic status, and lifestyle and conventional risk factors. The population
attributable risk for job strain was 3·4%.
Interpretation
Our findings suggest that prevention of workplace stress might decrease disease incidence;
however, this strategy would have a much smaller effect than would tackling of standard
risk factors, such as smoking.
Funding
Finnish Work Environment Fund, the Academy of Finland, the Swedish Research Council
for Working Life and Social Research, the German Social Accident Insurance, the Danish
National Research Centre for the Working Environment, the BUPA Foundation, the Ministry
of Social Affairs and Employment, the Medical Research Council, the Wellcome Trust,
and the US National Institutes of Health.
Although more than 80% of the global burden of cardiovascular disease occurs in low-income and middle-income countries, knowledge of the importance of risk factors is largely derived from developed countries. Therefore, the effect of such factors on risk of coronary heart disease in most regions of the world is unknown. We established a standardised case-control study of acute myocardial infarction in 52 countries, representing every inhabited continent. 15152 cases and 14820 controls were enrolled. The relation of smoking, history of hypertension or diabetes, waist/hip ratio, dietary patterns, physical activity, consumption of alcohol, blood apolipoproteins (Apo), and psychosocial factors to myocardial infarction are reported here. Odds ratios and their 99% CIs for the association of risk factors to myocardial infarction and their population attributable risks (PAR) were calculated. Smoking (odds ratio 2.87 for current vs never, PAR 35.7% for current and former vs never), raised ApoB/ApoA1 ratio (3.25 for top vs lowest quintile, PAR 49.2% for top four quintiles vs lowest quintile), history of hypertension (1.91, PAR 17.9%), diabetes (2.37, PAR 9.9%), abdominal obesity (1.12 for top vs lowest tertile and 1.62 for middle vs lowest tertile, PAR 20.1% for top two tertiles vs lowest tertile), psychosocial factors (2.67, PAR 32.5%), daily consumption of fruits and vegetables (0.70, PAR 13.7% for lack of daily consumption), regular alcohol consumption (0.91, PAR 6.7%), and regular physical activity (0.86, PAR 12.2%), were all significantly related to acute myocardial infarction (p<0.0001 for all risk factors and p=0.03 for alcohol). These associations were noted in men and women, old and young, and in all regions of the world. Collectively, these nine risk factors accounted for 90% of the PAR in men and 94% in women. Abnormal lipids, smoking, hypertension, diabetes, abdominal obesity, psychosocial factors, consumption of fruits, vegetables, and alcohol, and regular physical activity account for most of the risk of myocardial infarction worldwide in both sexes and at all ages in all regions. This finding suggests that approaches to prevention can be based on similar principles worldwide and have the potential to prevent most premature cases of myocardial infarction.
The survival and well-being of all species requires appropriate physiological responses to environmental and homeostatic challenges. The re- establishment and maintenance of homeostasis entails the coordinated activation and control of neuroendocrine and autonomic stress systems. These collective stress responses are mediated by largely overlapping circuits in the limbic forebrain, the hypothalamus and the brainstem, so that the respective contributions of the neuroendocrine and autonomic systems are tuned in accordance with stressor modality and intensity. Limbic regions that are responsible for regulating stress responses intersect with circuits that are responsible for memory and reward, providing a means to tailor the stress response with respect to prior experience and anticipated outcomes.
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