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Repert. med. cir ; 21(3): 172-178, 2012. tab
Article in English, Spanish | LILACS, COLNAL | ID: lil-795600

ABSTRACT

Las enfermedades cardiovasculares son la principal causa de muerte en todo el mundo y de ellas la hipertensión, la hipercolesterolemia y el tabaquismo son las tres cuartas partes de los casos. Ante su alta prevalencia y carga de morbilidad, surgió la inquietud de determinar si en la población médica se mantienen estos mismos niveles, al ser el pilar de la atención primaria. Objetivo: describir la prevalencia de los factores de riesgo cardiometabólico en estudiantes de posgrado y docentes de la facultad de medicina de la FUCS. Metodología: estudio de corte transversal. En el segundo semestre 2010 se realizó valoración médica mediante autodiligenciamiento de un cuestionario y la evaluación antropométrica. Se tomaron muestras para glicemia y perfil lipídico basal para calcular el riesgo cardiovascular por Framingham. Resultados: tasa de respuesta 61.2% (345/564), género masculino 61.7%, docentes 32.7%, estudiantes 67.3%, edad promedio (años) 34.3 (DE:9.1), prevalencia de obesidad abdominal 33.6%, sobrepeso 35.9, obesidad (IMC) 7.2%, tabaquismo 16.2%, síndrome metabólico 17.4%, hipertrigliceridemia 42.%, HDL bajo 41.5%, sedentarismo 80.2% y nivel de riesgo cardiovascular latente 79%, intermedio 18.9% y alto 2%.


Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of deaths worldwide and three-quarters of all cases are attributable to hypertension, hypercholesterolemia and smoking. The question on determining if similar levels of cardiovascular diseases are maintained within the medical population as the pillar of primary care was brought up due to their high prevalence and morbidity burden. Objective: to describe the prevalence of cardiometabolic risk factors within graduate program faculty members and students at the FUCS School of Medicine. Methodology: a cross-sectional study. A medical evaluation was performed by filling a questionnaire and conducting an anthropometric evaluation during the second semester of 2010. Blood samples for fasting glucose and baseline lipid profile were drawn to estimate the cardiovascular risk using the Framingham scale. Results: response index: 61.2% (345/564), males: 61.7%, faculty members: 32.7%, students: 67.3%, mean age (years): 34.3 (SD: 9.1), prevalence of abdominal obesity: 33.6%, overweight: 35.9, obesity (BMI): 7.2%, smoking: 16.2%, metabolic syndrome: 17.4%, hypertriglyceridemia 42.%, low HDL: 41.5%, sedentary lifestyle: 80.2% and latent trait of cardiovascular risk: 79%, moderate 18.9% and high 2%.


Subject(s)
Humans , Cardiovascular Diseases , Metabolism , Schools, Medical , Risk Factors
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