The autopsy records of all people over 30 yr old who died and underwent autopsy in Olmsted County from 1950 through 1979 were reviewed (n = 5558, autopsy rate .apprx. 50%). The hearts of 530 subjects were reexamined for the severity of coronary artery disease and this determination was compared with the recorded grade. After both record and specimen review the 3 major coronary arteries were graded according to percent reduction in luminal area (1 = 0-25%; 2 = 26-50%; 3 = 51-75%; 4 = 76-99%; 5 = occlusion). Grades 4 and 5 were designated as significant coronary disease (SCD), and 94-99% of diagnoses of SCD were confirmed on reexamination. The percentage of people with SCD increased during the period 1950-1969 and remained high in the 1970s. Cohort analysis showed an increase in the disease in all age groups (exception the 30- to 49-yr-old group for the later decades of birth). There was no change in the prevalence of myocardial infarction scars over the study period.
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HAVLIK RJ, 1979, NIH791610 PUBL
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