Cardiorespiratory Fitness, Body Mass Index and All-Cause Mortality in Women, ACLS 1970-1994
Abstract
Braun, LeeAnn, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, Body Mass Index and All-Cause Mortality in Women, Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study, 1970-1994. Master of Public Health (Epidemiology), December, 1999, 44 p.p., 9 tables, references, 24 titles. Cardiorespiratory fitness and body mass index are related to morbidity and mortality (Manson, 1996). There is a preponderance of evidence supporting this relation in men (Gibbons, 1983; Blair, 1989, 1995, 1996; Lee, I, 1993; Barlow, 1995; Kampert, 1996; Dorn, 1997; Lee, C, 1999). The evaluation of the stated risk factors have been virtually unexplored in a cohort of women. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether higher levels of cardiorespiratory fitness attenuate the risk of all-cause mortality in overweight and obese women. In this prospective study, the study population consisted of 7572 women ages 20-89 years, who had a medical examination and achieved at least 85% of their age-adjusted maximal heart rate during a maximal treadmill test were followed for 69,979 woman-years. After adjustment for age, exam year, health status and smoking status, unfit women had a higher risk for all-cause mortality across BMI categories [RR 1.70 95% CI (1.18, 2.43)]. The benefits of cardiorespiratory fitness significantly decrease the risk of all-cause mortality in women as the concurrent consideration of cardiorespiratory fitness.
Subject
Clinical Epidemiology
Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Exercise Science
Kinesiology
Life Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Other Public Health
Public Health
Cardiorespiratory fitness
body mass index
all-cause mortality
women
Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study
stated risk factors
overweight
obese
Community Health and Preventive Medicine
Exercise Science
Kinesiology
Life Sciences
Medicine and Health Sciences
Other Public Health
Public Health
Cardiorespiratory fitness
body mass index
all-cause mortality
women
Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study
stated risk factors
overweight
obese