2001 年 40 巻 7 号 p. 589-593
Objective To assess the long-term prognosis after recovery from acute myocardial infarction (AMI) in the general population in Japan.
Patients and Methods Among the 575, 000 inhabitants of the Yamagata metropolitan area, a total of 117 patients suffered from first their AMI from April to December 1993. Thirteen patients (11%) died within four weeks after the onset. Of the remaining 104 patients, 101 (mean age, 69±12 years) were followed for an average of 65±5 months.
Results Twenty-seven of the 101 patients (27%) died during the follow-up period. Compared with survivors, the patients who died were significantly older at the onset of AMI (74±12 vs. 67±12 years, p<0.01). More diabetic patients than non-diabetic patients died (42 vs. 21%, p<0.05) because of the higher frequency of non-cardiac deaths (29 vs. 11%, p<0.05). The total number of deaths of cardiac origin, including sudden deaths, was 11 (40%) and was lower than the number of definite non-cardiac deaths (n=15). The time from the onset of AMI to death was significantly shorter in cases of cardiac death than in cases of non-cardiac death (median, 16 vs. 45 months, p<0.01). Among non-cardiac deaths, deaths due to lung cancer and cerebral infarction were notable in men (standardized mortality ratio 278) and women (571), respectively.
Conclusion Non-cardiac death during long-term follow-up after AMI was more frequent than death of cardiac origin. Thus, preventive measures, including early treatment of complicating diseases, must be implemented to improve the long-term prognosis of patients with myocardial infarction.
(Internal Medicine 40: 589-593, 2001)