Acute myocardial infarction and Helicobacter pylori seropositivity.

1999 
Infectious agents includingHelicobacter pylori, have been linked to coronary heart diseases on epidemiological and pathogenetic grounds. Classical risk factors fail to explain all the epidemiological variations of the disease. Our aim was to investigate the association of acute myocardial infarction withHelicobacter pylori infection in a case-control study by comparing a group of male patients with a control group of blood donors matched for sex and age. We investigated the classical cardiovascular risk factors in all patients. We studied 44 consecutive male patients, aged 40–65 years, admitted for acute myocardial infarction to the Coronary Care Unit at Novi Ligure Hospital in northern Italy.Helicobacter pylori infection was assessed by measurement of antibodies (IgG) againstHelicobacter pylori in blood. Volunteer blood donors attending Molinette Hospital Blood Bank in Turin, northern Italy served as controls. Among the patients we investigated the presence of hypertension, cholesterol and glucose levels in serum, fibrinogen in plasma, smoking habits, and social class.Helicobacter pylori infection was present in 34 of 44 (77%) patients and in 183 of 310 (59%) controls (P<0.05); the odds ratio was 2.36 (95% confidence interval 1.08–5.31). Classical cardiovascular risk factors did not differ among patients with and withoutHelicobacter pylori infection. In conclusion, patients with acute myocardial infarction had a significantly higher prevalence ofHelicobacter pylori infection than the control population. The classical risk factors for cardiovascular diseases were equally distributed among patients irrespective of theirHelicobacter pylori status.
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