For five years, we prospectively studied 353 consecutive patients undergoing first-time coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) for stable angina in the North of England. Angina was present before surgery in nearly all patients, in 20% 3 months after surgery, and in 48% after 60 months. The Nottingham Health Profile, showed a significant improvement in perceived health status (PHS) 12 and 60 months after surgery compared with preoperation. However, PHS at 60 months was worse than at 12 months in the dimensions 'pain' and 'physical mobility' in part 1, and in 'looking after the home' and 'taking holidays' in part 2. Employment rates were 36%, 34% and 21%, before, and 12 and 60 months after surgery, respectively. Working at 12 and 60 months was associated with age below retirement age, work preoperation and absence of angina, and at 12 months also with male gender and waiting time < 6 months. This study describes everyday clinical practice. The significant improvement in angina symptoms and PHS after CABG persists for at least 5 years. However, only one third of patients in this geographical area return to work, and this is not solely dependent on clinical symptoms.
Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] concentration and apoli-poprotein(a) [apo(a)] isoforms (identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis [SDS-PAGE] and Western blotting) were determined in a group of 508 asymp-tomatic Caucasian members of the community and in 318 Caucasian patients with angiographically defined coronary artery disease (CAD). Conventional risk factors for CAD were also measured. Lp(a) concentration was almost twice as high in subjects with CAD (geometric mean, 152 mg/L [geometric SD, 10 to 1398 mg/L]) as in asymptomatic control subjects (geometric mean, 84 mg/L [geometric SD, 21 to 334 mg/L]). Asymptomatic women had higher concentrations of Lp(a) than asymptomatic men. Patients with CAD were older and were more likely to have smoked and to have a first-degree relative with premature CAD (<55 years of age), and a higher proportion were male. Patients with CAD had higher concentrations of Lp(a) independently of the number of isoform bands expressed. When apo(a) isoforms were allocated to 1 of 10 classes on the basis of their molecular size (R, versus apoB in SDS-PAGE), patients with CAD did not express an excess of low-molecular-mass (higher concentration) isoforms but did express a higher proportion of double-band phenotypes with fewer "null" phenotypes. The relationship between the two
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