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‘Stroke
Belt’ Deaths tied to non-traditional risk
factors
Newswise — Southerners die from stroke more
than in any other U.S. region, but exactly
why that happens is unknown.
A new report by researchers at the
University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)
and the University of Vermont underscores
that geographic and racial differences are
not the sole reasons behind the South’s
higher stroke death rate.
The data is from UAB’s Reasons for
Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke
(REGARDS) study, which has enrolled more
than 30,200 U.S. participants.
The study confirms a greater-than 40 percent
higher stroke death rate in eight
southeastern states known as the Stroke Belt
– Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North and South Carolina and
Tennessee.
After factoring in age, race and sex-related
factors, the predicted stroke risk was only
slightly higher in Stoke Belt states
compared to other regions (10.7 percent
versus 10.1 percent), said George Howard,
Dr.PH., professor of biostatistics in UAB’s
School of Public Health and a REGARDS
principal.
That risk was calculated using nine known
risk factors common to stroke screening.
“We found geographic and racial differences
are useful in predicting stroke risk, but
they only explain less than half the
picture. Something else is happening,”
Howard said.
“It could be exposure to allergens in the
home, it could be micronutrients in drinking
water or it could be other factors
considered ‘non-traditional’ because they
don’t fall into the list of nine factors
commonly used to predict stroke risk.”
The findings are reported in the Annals of
Neurology.
All minority groups, including Native
Americans, Hispanics and African-Americans,
face a significantly higher risk for stroke
and death from stroke compared to whites,
and research is focused on exactly why that
is, said Mary Cushman, M.D., of the
University of Vermont, the study’s lead
author.
Continued analysis of REGARDS data and
follow-up study will determine other stroke
risk factors and their significance.
One detail that emerged in the Annals of
Neurology study is that the prevalence of
diabetes and hypertension was up to five
percentage points higher in the Southeast.
That means interventions to reduce
geographic disparities in diabetes and
hypertension – including boosting diabetes
screening rates and follow-up care – could
also reduce geographic disparities in stroke
death, Howard said.
REGARDS already has spawned more than 50
accompanying research reports.
The study is a research partnership that
includes UAB’s Departments of Epidemiology,
Biostatistics and Preventive Medicine, UAB’s
Center for Aging and the Center for the
Study of Community Health, the University of
Vermont in Burlington, the University of
Arkansas for Medical Sciences in Little
Rock, the University of Cincinnati, Indiana
University in Indianapolis, the Alabama
Neurological Institute in Birmingham, the
Medical University of South Carolina in
Charleston and Wake Forest University School
of Medicine in Winston-Salem, N.C.
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