Circulation, Vol 71, 441-449, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
PT Williams, WL Haskell, KM Vranizan, SN Blair, RM Krauss, HR Superko, JJ Albers, B Frey-Hewitt and PD Wood
In major prospective studies it has been reported that high heart rate at
rest predicts the development of coronary heart disease (CHD) or
cardiovascular disease (CVD) in men, but the mechanisms producing these
relationships are unknown. Since lipoprotein levels contribute strongly to
the risk of CHD and CVD, we examined the relationship of resting heart rate
to plasma concentrations of high-density (HDL), low-density (LDL), and very
low-density (VLDL) lipoproteins, apolipoprotein (apo) A- I and A-II, and
serum concentrations of lipoprotein subfractions in 81 men to determine if
atherogenic lipoproteins could potentially induce the reported association
of heart rate with development of CHD or CVD. The significant (p less than
or equal to .05) Spearman's correlations for resting heart rate vs HDL2
mass (rs = -.24), HDL3 mass (rs = -.40), HDL cholesterol (rs = -.36), apo
A-I (rs = -.29), triglycerides (rs = .31), VLDL cholesterol (rs = .24),
VLDL mass (rs = .27), and LDL mass of Sof 0-7 subfraction (rs = .30) lend
support to our hypothesis of lipoprotein-induced relationships of CHD with
heart rate. The correlations for resting heart rate vs triglycerides, HDL
cholesterol, HDL3 mass, VLDL mass, and LDL mass of Sof 0-7 subfraction
remain significant when adjusted for adiposity, age, smoking habits, diet,
and physical fitness as measured by maximum aerobic power (VO2 max) or
submaximal heart rate during a graded exercise test.
ARTICLES
Associations of resting heart rate with concentrations of lipoprotein subfractions in sedentary men
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