Coronary disease––prone behavior among Japanese men: Job-centered lifestyle and social dominance - 10/09/11
Abstract |
In Japan the type A behavior pattern, particularly its component of hostility, is known to have less value as a risk for coronary artery disease (CAD) than in the United States. We developed a questionnaire (Japanese Coronary-prone Behavior Scale [JCBS]) to investigate the behavioral correlates with CAD among contemporary Japanese persons. The JCBS was administered to 419 Japanese men undergoing coronary angiography; 310 of them had angiographic or clinical evidence or both of CAD, and 109 had no evidence of CAD. The group with CAD had more coronary risk factors than the group without CAD, but the two groups did not differ in type A behavior pattern as assessed with the Jenkins Activity Survey. Stepwise discriminant analysis, in which standard coronary risk factors were forced into the model, revealed that inclusion of nine JCBS items (scale C) in the model resulted in the best discrimination between the two groups. Cross-validation results showed that the error-rate estimates for the discriminant models that consisted only of standard coronary risk factors, only of scale C items, and of their combination were 34.7, 32.4, and 27.0%, respectively. The scale C items represented a job-centered lifestyle, social dominance, and suppressed overt type A behaviors. These results indicate that an independent behavior pattern prone to CAD is discernible among Japanese men and suggest that the behavior pattern may contain characteristics that can be differentiated from those that constitute the type A behavior pattern. (Am Heart J 1997;134:1029-36.)
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Plan
From the Third Department of Internal Medicine, Nagoya City University Medical School; Department of Internal Medicine, Warabi Municipal Hospital; Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, School of Medicine, Tokai University; Department of Cardiology, Heart Institute of Japan, Tokyo Women's Medical College; Tokyo Institute of Psychiatry; Department of Human Development, Naruto University of Education; Department of Psychosomatic Medicine, Fukushima Rosai Hospital; and Department of Cardiology, Nagoya Daini Red Cross Hospital. |
|
Reprint requests: Junichiro Hayano, MD, Third Department of Internal Medicine, Nagoya City University Medical School, 1 Kawasumi Mizuho-cho Mizuho-ku, Nagoya 467, Japan. |
|
4/1/86034 |
Vol 134 - N° 6
P. 1029-1036 - décembre 1997 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?