Abstract

The risk factors and clinical course of 165 patients under 40 years of age (mean age 35) having an initial myocardial infarction (MI) (Group I) were compared to 100 patients over 40 (mean age 50) (Group II). Six risk factors were analyzed: smoking 20 pack-years, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, family history of ischemic disease, diabetes mellitus, and obesity. Only two patients in Group I and six patients in Group II had no risk factors, but the mean number of risk factors in Group I (3) differed from Group II (2) ( p< 0.05). Group I had only 18% of patients without either obesity, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, or diabetes mellitus as risk factors while Group II had 41 patients with similar findings ( p< 0.001). Group I had hyperlipidemia, obesity, and family history more commonly than did Group II while hypertension was more frequent in the older patients. A prior history of angina was present in nearly half of Group I and II but physical exertion just prior to MI was more common in Group I (32%) than in Group II (20%) ( p < 0.05). Death at the time of MI was more frequent in Group II ( p < 0.001) but congestive failure occurred in 17% of both groups. On follow-up, 45% of both groups had no complications, and the rates of subsequent MI and angina pectoris were similar in both groups. However, late death was less frequent in Group I than in Group II. Patients under 40 with myocardial infarction have more risk factors than those over 40 which may play some role in pathophysiology of young myocardial infarction. Physical exertion at the time of myocardial infarction is more common in younger patients. The complication rate is similar in both young and older myocardial infarction patients but the mortality rate, both early and late, is lower in young myocardial infarction patients.

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