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Public health impact of daily life triggers of sudden cardiac death: A systematic review and comparative risk assessment (CROSBI ID 308818)

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Čulić, Viktor ; AlTurki, Ahmed ; Proietti, Riccardo Public health impact of daily life triggers of sudden cardiac death: A systematic review and comparative risk assessment // Resuscitation, 162 (2021), 154-162. doi: 10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.02.036

Podaci o odgovornosti

Čulić, Viktor ; AlTurki, Ahmed ; Proietti, Riccardo

engleski

Public health impact of daily life triggers of sudden cardiac death: A systematic review and comparative risk assessment

Background Sudden cardiac death (SCD) may be triggered by daily circumstances and activities such as stressful psycho-emotional events, physical exertion or substance misuse. We calculated population attributable fractions (PAFs) to estimate the public health relevance of daily life triggers of SCD and to compare their population impacts. Methods We searched PubMed, Scopus and the Web of Science citation databases to retrieve studies of triggers of SCD and cardiac arrest that would enable a computation of PAFs. When more studies investigated the same trigger, a meta-analytical pooled risk random-effect estimate was used. Results Of the retrieved studies, eight provided data enabling computation of PAFs. The prevalence of exposure within population for SCD triggers in the control periods ranged from 1.06% for influenza infection to 8.73% for recent use of cannabis. Triggers ordered from the highest to the lowest risk increase were: physical exertion, recent cocaine use, episodic alcohol consumption, recent amphetamine use, episodic coffee consumption, psycho-emotional stress within the previous month, influenza infection, and recent cannabis use. The relative risk increase ranged from 1.10 to 4.98. By accounting for both the magnitude of the risk increase and the prevalence in the population, the present estimates of PAF assign 14.5% (95% confidence interval [CI] 4.9– 28.5) of all SCDs to episodic alcohol consumption, 9.4% (95% CI 1.2– 29.3) to physical exertion, 6.9% (95% CI 0.3–25.0) to cocaine, 6% (95% CI 1.2–14.6) to episodic coffee consumption, 3% (95% CI 0.4– 6.8) to psycho- emotional stress in the previous month, 1.7% (95% CI −0.9 to 12.9) to amphetamines, 0.9% (95% CI −4.9 to 12.5) to cannabis, and 0.3% (95% CI 0.2– 0.4) to influenza infections. Conclusions In addition to episodic alcohol consumption, a trigger with the greatest public health importance for SCD, episodic physical exertion, cocaine use and coffee consumption also show a considerable population impact.

Alcohol Cocaine Coffee Psycho-emotional stress Physical exertion Sudden cardiac death Trigger

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Podaci o izdanju

162

2021.

154-162

objavljeno

0300-9572

10.1016/j.resuscitation.2021.02.036

Povezanost rada

Kliničke medicinske znanosti

Poveznice
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