Hypertension Clinical Trial
To monitor the relationship of lifestyle variables, particularly exercise, to cardiovascular mortality, all-cause mortality, projected longevity and aging, and cardiovascular morbidity in a large cohort of college graduates. To assess changing patterns of exercise, cigarette smoking, body weight, and blood pressure between the 1960s and 1990s for relationship to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
BACKGROUND:
Hypertension and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease have been ascribed to a variety of
host-environmental characteristics -- cigarette smoking, modern-day dietary practices,
abnormal blood lipid and blood glucose patterns, obesity, psychosocial factors, genetics,
etc. -- together with the decline in vigorous job activity because of mechanization and
related developments in industry and transportation. To the extent that job assignments
limit exercise opportunities, leisure-time physical activity may be of increasing importance
in the control and reduction of coronary heart disease. There is need to determine what
levels, frequencies, and intensities of exercise exist in modern American
lifestyles--particularly the trends of exercise enthusiasm, and how these have changed
during the periods of increasing and decreasing cardiovascular incidence from 1912-1967 and
1968 to date, respectively. There is need to know what physical demands on the human body
are essential to maintain cardiac and vascular well-being in successive age groups,
including old age, and what conversion from a sedentary to an active lifestyle can mean to
the betterment or detriment of man's health. The present study began as an intramural
project of the National Heart Institute in 1961 and has continued to date, becoming an
extramural project in 1968. Approval was received from the NIH and the universities
concerned to use the baseline data collected from college physical examinations, social and
athletic records of male students examined at Harvard University between 1916-1950 and at
the University of Pennsylvania between 1931-1940.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
This longitudinal study began in 1984 and built on college data from entrance physical
examinations, social and athletic records for 1916-1950, self-assessed mail questionnaire
responses on six occasions from 1962-1980 and death certificates from 1916 to date. A
seventh lifestyle and health questionnaire was sent to living alumni in 1988. Exercise
findings gathered from this and former questionnaires were converted into a physical
activity index on the basis of estimated energy output ratings expressed in kilocalorie per
unit of time and kilocalorie per kilogram per unit of time. The 1988 questionnaire preserved
comparability with earlier observations but allowed assessment of endurance, body weight,
standard caloric values of specific physical activities, and intensity and frequency of
effort. It was felt that such distinctions would aid an attempt to devise exercise
prescriptions for men of differing ages and conditions of health. To obtain current and
historical medical data on alumni, permission was requested of the study subjects to contact
personal physicians. Results of physical examinations completed by staff in 1962-1965 were
provided to personal physicians of study subjects. Similar results were provided to personal
physicians of alumni undergoing treadmill and clinical testing in 1988.
The study was renewed in 1996 in order to : refine and extend observations on continuity and
change in physical activity for relation to cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and
mortality, to functional capacity and quality of life, and to longevity; and to direct
special emphasis to the type, intensity, duration, and timing of exercise that distinguish
the effects of light, moderate, and vigorous activities on health. In accomplishing these
aims, confounding, interaction, and trends of relations with personal characteristics and
other health habits are taken into account. Resources for study include: 1) college student
data of 1916-1950 collected from health, social, and athletic records; 2) contemporary
alumni(ae) data collected on eight occasions, 1962-1993, by mail questionnaires pertaining
to physician-diagnosed disease, physical exercise, cigarette smoking, body size and shape,
diet, alcohol consumption, other life way elements, and family disease patterns; and 3)
annual cause-specific mortality certification, 1916-1998. Anticipated deaths (1989-1998)
from CHD will approximate 5,500; from stroke, 1,000; and from all causes, 14,500. Non-fatal
CHD and stroke events will increase these already large numbers substantially. Using both
prior and redefined definitions of physical activity, the investigators will direct
attention to continued and altered exercise patterns, both increases and decreases in energy
expenditure, between the 1960s and 70s, between the 70s and 80s, and between the 80s and 90s
for relation through 1998 to incidence of non-fatal and fatal CVD, and to quality-adjusted
years of life remaining. Statistical power to detect relations between exercise and CVD will
be considerable for alumni, although weak for alumnae. Special efforts are made to collect
data from women in the Pennsylvania cohort. The study ends in June, 2000.
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