Association of Hyperuricemia with Coronary Artery Disease in Gulab Devi Chest Hospital

Authors

  • Aqsa Rasheed Gulab Devi Postgraduate Medical Institute, Lahore-54600, Pakistan
  • Majid Kaleem Gulab Devi Chest Hospital, Lahore-54600, Pakistan

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37978/tijfs.v1i2.20

Keywords:

Serum Uric acid, Ischemic heart disease

Abstract

Abstract
Background: Coronary artery disease is the most common and life threatening cardiac emergency presenting to a hospital. Having significant mortality and morbidity are on the rise in Pakistan. The objective of the study is to examine the association of elevated level of serum uric acid with ischemic heart disease among adult population, to guide planning for primary and secondary prevention of this disease in community.
Subjects and Methods: This cross-sectional study studied 110 consecutive patients from 20-80 years of age presenting with IHD (Myocardial infarction, unstable angina). All the subjects who were approached to participate in the study, gave their consent. Face-to-face interviews were conducted using a structured questionnaire followed by laboratory tests.
Results: Association of serum uric acid were lined up as gender, smoking, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, menopause, dyslipidemia, family history and obesity. In this study, out of 110 patients 35 (32%) were females and 74 (68%) were males. Minimum Age of patients in this study was 30 years and maximum age was 70 years This study revealed that chest pain was the most occurring symptom which was observed in 39 patients which are 35.45% of the total patients and the second most occurring symptom was Dyspnea which was observed in 32 patients which 29.09% of the total patients. The study reveals that the major risk factor observed in CAD patients is ‘HTN’ which was found in 81 patients which are 73.64% of the total patients. However, ‘Smoking’ and ‘DM’ are proximate in occurrence and were found in 59 (53.64%) and 56 (50.91%) patients respectively. The study revealed that hyperuricemia was more in males that was 34(22.67) than in females.
Conclusion: This study concluded that there was no significant association between hyperuricemia with ischemic heart disease.

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Published

2017-07-01

How to Cite

Rasheed, A., & Kaleem, M. (2017). Association of Hyperuricemia with Coronary Artery Disease in Gulab Devi Chest Hospital. The International Journal of Frontier Sciences, 1(2), 17–25. https://doi.org/10.37978/tijfs.v1i2.20

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