TAYLOR
ET AL., 34th BETHESDA CONFERENCE: Can Atherosclerosis Imaging Techniques
Improve the Detection of Patients at Risk for Ischemic Heart Disease?
J Am Coll Cardiol 2003;41:11:1855-917
BETHESDA
CONFERENCE REPORT
34th Bethesda Conference: Can Atherosclerosis Imaging Techniques
Improve the Detection of Patients at Risk for Ischemic Heart Disease?1
Richard
C. Pasternak, MD, FACC, Co-Chair, Jonathan Abrams, MD, FACC, Co-Chair,
Philip Greenland, MD, FACC, Lynn A. Smaha, MD, PHD, FACC, Peter
W. F. Wilson, MD, Nancy Houston-Miller, RN, BSN
Figures 1a and 1b.

Figure
1. Data from the Framingham Heart Study experience. Much of the
middle-aged population has a low to intermediate risk for hard CHD
(myocardial infarction or CHD death). Even up to age 80 years, more
than three-quarters of women experience a 10-year risk of CHD that
falls below 10%. The risks are higher for men, and by age 60 the
majority of men are at intermediate (10% to 20% per 10 years) or
high risk (greater than 20% per 10 years) for CHD. Figure courtesy
Peter W. F. Wilson, MD, Framingham Heart Study (unpublished data).
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