The pattern and incidence of cardiovascular disease was studied in a general practice in an urban-rural area in the west coast of West Malaysia. Hypertension, rheumatic heart disease and congenital heart disease accounted for 85% of the 476 patients with evidence of cardiovascular disease. Ischaemic heart disease, arteriosclerotic heart disease and other conditions accounted for the rest. Emphasis is laid on the salient features of incidence in general practice. Comparison is made with previous clinical and pathological studies from this region.
Study site: General practjce clinic, Telok Anson [Teluk Intan], District of Lower Perak, Malaysia
One hundred and thirty-two newly diagnosed Asian diabetic patients (39 Malay, 30 Chinese and 63 Indians) have been studied in Kuala Lumpur. The highest proportion of diabetic patients were Indian and the lowest were Chinese. Vascular complications were equally common in Asian diabetic patients as in Europeans; coronary heart disease was relatively more common in Indians and cerebral vascular disease in Chinese. Twenty percent of all Asian diabetic patients requiring admission to hospital also had coronary heart disease, 9% had cerebral vascular disease and 8% had gangrene or ulceration of the feet. In Kuala Lumpur, diabetes is a very important risk factor for coronary heart disease: 17% of all patients admitted to the General Hospital with coronary heart disease were already diabetic.
The concentrations of non-haem iron, ferritin and ferritin-iron were measured in the livers of 137 adults and children collected at necropsy. The concentrations of non-haem and ferritin iron were found to be 146.6 +/- 95.2 micrograms/g and 61.6 +/- 32.4 micrograms/g, respectively, in males and 108.0 +/- 61.7 micrograms/g and 60.6 +/- 26.4 micrograms/g, respectively, in females. The values for males in Singapore were lower than those reported in developed Western countries. No correlation was observed between storage iron and age, or ferritin concentration and age. Concentrations of non-haem iron and ferritin were similar for persons dying from accident and coronary heart disease. The non-haem iron concentration in Chinese (187.9 +/- 101.0 micrograms/g) was significantly greater than that in Indians (103.1 +/- 65.8 micrograms/g), while the ferritin concentration in Chinese (6.18 +/- 2.37 mg/g) was significantly greater than either Malays (3.81 +/- 1.8 mg/g) or Indians (3.52 +/- 1.6 mg/g). A significant positive correlation was observed between the non-haem iron and ferritin and also ferritin-iron in Chinese males (r values of 0.678 and 0.598, respectively) and Indian males (r values of 0.576 and 0.612, respectively). However, the correlation between these indices was not significant in the case of Malay males. In premenopausal women the non-haem iron correlated well with ferritin (r = 0.737) and ferritin iron (r = 0.826) while the correlation was lacking in postmenopausal women.
The potential use of ancrod, a purified isolate from the venom of the Malaysian pit viper, Agkistrodon rhodostoma, in decreasing the frequency of cyclic flow variations in severely stenosed canine coronary arteries and causing thrombolysis of an acute coronary thrombus induced by a copper coil was evaluated. Open-chest, anesthetized dogs were used. Ancrod was given intravenously (8 U/kg) over 1 hour and caused a significant reduction in the frequency of cyclic flow variations (5.8 +/- 0.7 to 3.6 +/- 0.8 cyclic flow variations per 30 minutes, p less than 0.05), whereas control animals failed to decrease the frequency of their cyclic flow variations over the same time period (5.3 +/- 0.3 to 5.0 +/- 0.4 cyclic flow variations per 30-minute period). Twenty-seven dogs had a coronary thrombus induced by a copper coil positioned directly in a major coronary artery; of these, four died of ventricular fibrillation prior to treatment, eight received an infusion of saline and showed no thrombolysis over 5 hours, and three died of ventricular fibrillation during the initial part of an intravenous infusion of ancrod. The remaining 12 dogs received ancrod intravenously (16 U/kg); six demonstrated lysis of the coronary thrombus (mean time to lysis, 65 +/- 20 minutes). The concentrations of ancrod used in these studies produced a severe decrease in systemic fibrinogen concentration and a significant decrease in the inhibitor of plasminogen activator levels. Thus, ancrod decreases the frequency of cyclic flow variations in stenosed canine coronary arteries and may cause coronary thrombolysis in approximately 50% of animals within 65 +/- 20 minutes of its intravenous administration.
The Cardiothoracic Department, General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur which was set up in April 1982, deals with a wide range of cardiac disease, general thoracic and also vascular cases. A total of 2,450 operations were performed from April 1982 to February 1987, and 79.3% of these were for cardiac cases (open and closed heart). This paper reports a review of the 1,110 consecutive open heart operations performed by the Department during the stated period.
A six-month survey of 828 patients admitted to the Coronary Care Unit (CCU) of the General Hospital, Kuala Lumpur was carried out to ascertain whether the smoking habits of the patients predisposed them to definite coronary events and its immediate outcome i.e. early mortality (within seven days). The various ethnic groups were also screened to determine if they were at increased risk to coronary events in relation to other known risk factors. Three hundred and eleven patients - 239 males, and 72 females - had confirmed acute myocardial infarctions of whom 190 were smokers (172 males, and 18 females). Sixty-nine infarct patients died within the first seven days post-Ml: 35 were smokers (50.7%). Two-hundred and eighty other patients had non-infarct coronary events. Of these, 167 were smokers. In contrast, only 99 out of 237 patients admitted for non-coronary events, were smokers. It thus appeared that patients admitted to the CCU for suspected cardiac events had a greater incidence of confirmed acute myocardial infarction or acute coronary events if they were smokers (p < 0.001). Mortality from these coronary events was not seen to increase among smokers in this population sample. Women who smoked as a whole, were not found to be at increased risk to coronary events, but women smokers 60 years and older were shown to be at increased risk to developing confirmed coronary events (p < 0.01).