Relationship between combat-related traumatic injury and its severity to predicted cardiovascular disease risk: ADVANCE cohort study

BMC Cardiovascular Disorders(2023)

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摘要
B ackground This study investigated the relationship between combat-related traumatic injury (CRTI) and its severity and predicted cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Material and methods This was an analysis of comparative 10-year predicted CVD risk (myocardial infarction, stroke or CVD-death) using the QRISK®3 scoring-system among adults recruited into the Armed Services Trauma Rehabilitation Outcome (ADVANCE) cohort study. Participants with CRTI were compared to uninjured servicemen frequency-matched by age, sex, rank, deployment (Afghanistan 2003–2014) and role. Injury severity was quantified using the New Injury Severity Score (NISS). R esults One thousand one hundred forty four adult combat veterans were recruited, consisting of 579 injured (161 amputees) and 565 uninjured men of similar age ethnicity and time from deployment/injury. Significant mental illness (8.5% vs 4.4%; p = 0.006) and erectile dysfunction (11.6% vs 5.8%; p < 0.001) was more common, body mass index (28.1 ± 3.9 vs 27.4 ± 3.4 kg/m 2 ; p = 0.001) higher and systolic blood pressure variability (median [IQR]) (1.7 [1.2–3.0] vs 2.1 [1.2–3.5] mmHg; p = 0.008) lower among the injured versus uninjured respectively. The relative risk (RR) of predicted CVD (versus the population expected risk) was higher (RR:1.67 [IQR 1.16–2.48]) among the injured amputees versus the injured non-amputees (RR:1.60 [1.13–2.43]) and uninjured groups (RR:1.52 [1.12–2.34]; overall p = 0.015). After adjustment for confounders CRTI, worsening injury severity (higher NISS, blast and traumatic amputation) were independently associated with QRISK®3 scores. C onclusion CRTI and its worsening severity were independently associated with increased predicted 10-year CVD risk.
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关键词
Military,QRISK3,Cardiovascular risk,Combat,Traumatic injury
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