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Circulation. 1998;98:2494-2500

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(Circulation. 1998;98:2494-2500.)
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.


Current Perspectives

Bundle-Branch Block in a General Male Population

The Study of Men Born 1913

Peter Eriksson, MD; Per-Olof Hansson, MD; Henry Eriksson, PhD, MD; ; Mikael Dellborg, PhD, MD

From the Clinical Experimental Research Laboratory (P.E., M.D.) and the Section of Preventive Medicine (P.-O.H., H.E.), Department of Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital/Östra, Göteborg, Sweden.

Correspondence to Peter Eriksson, MD, Department of Medicine, Sahlgrenska University Hospital/Östra, SE-416 85 Göteborg, Sweden.

Background—Interest in bundle-branch block has focused primarily on its role as a predictor of mortality and coexisting cardiovascular diseases. Previous studies of prevalence, correlation to cardiovascular disease, and mortality have produced conflicting results.

Methods and Results—We studied a random-sampled population of 855 men who were 50 years old in 1963 and followed them up for 30 years with repeated examinations. Men who developed bundle-branch block were studied with regard to cumulative incidence, relationship with cardiovascular disease/risk factors, and survival. The prevalence of bundle-branch block increases from 1% at age 50 years to 17% at age 80 years, resulting in a cumulative incidence of 18%. No significant relationship with ischemic heart disease or mortality was found. Men who would develop bundle-branch block had a bigger heart volume at age 50 years and developed diabetes mellitus and congestive heart disease during follow-up more often than control subjects.

Conclusions—Bundle-branch block correlates strongly to age and is common in elderly men. Our results support the theory that bundle-branch block is a marker of a slowly progressing degenerative disease that also affects the myocardium.


Key Words: bundle-branch block • epidemiology • population • survival




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