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© 1980 Oxford University Press

research-article

Cigarette Smoking in Relation to the Risk of Myocardial infarction in Young Women. Modifying Influence of Age and Predisposing Factors

LYNN ROSENBERG1, SAMUEL SHAPIRO1, DAVID W KAUFMAN1, SDENNIS SLONE1, OLLI S MIETTINEN2 and PAUL D STOLLEY3

1 Drug Epidemiology Unit, Boston University School of Medicine, 777 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
2 Department of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts US
3 Department of Research Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia Pennsylvania

Rosenberg LYNN (Drug Epidemiology Unit, Boston University School of Medicine, 777 Concord Avenue, Cambridge MA 02138, USA), Shapiro S, Kaufman D W, Stone D, Miettinen O S and Stolley P D. Cigarette smoking in relation to the risk of myocardial infraction in young women. Modifying influence of age and predisposing factors, International Journal of Epidemiology 1980, 9: 57–63.

We evaluated the relation between myocardial infraction (MI) and cigarette smoking in women 30 to 49 years of age. Among 318 women who had survived recent first infractions and 1272 age-matched controls, the proportions of cigarette smokers were 83%and 54% respectively (p <0,001), The estimated relative risk rose progressively with amount smoked: compared with women who had never smoked, the estimate was 1.8 for smokers of less than 15 cigarettes per day and 6.9 for smokers of 35 or more cigarettes per day. At each level of smoking, the relative increase in risk was greater at younger ages and among those not apparently predisposed from other factors. Although MI is a rare disease in young women, our data indicate that the risks faced by those who smoke heavily are appreciable.

Received 21 August 1979


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