Albuquerque Journal

Study: Native Americans facing rising risk of stroke

UNM researcher­s to dig deeper into reasons for study’s findings

- BY MICHAEL HAEDERLE

When stroke treatment expert Atif Zafar, M.D., joined The University of New Mexico Department of Neurology faculty a few years ago, he decided to study the state’s unique patient population, so he started building a comprehens­ive stroke database.

“As we analyzed the data, the more we found that the risk factor profile, which includes high blood pressure, obesity and diabetes, was getting worse through time,” Zafar says.

It was particular­ly worrying, he says, that “the prevalence of these risk factors in Native Americans was going up.”

Zafar and colleagues at the Cleveland Clinic presented a report on their findings at last week’s annual meeting of the American Stroke Associatio­n. The research, which tries to gauge the extent of the problem by looking at health data from nearly 5,000 male Native American ischemic stroke patients enrolled in a national Cerner database serving 700 hospitals, should be considered preliminar­y until published in a peerreview­ed journal.

The data, collected between 2000 and 2016, found the patients had many factors putting them at risk for stroke, including: High blood pressure (66.6 percent); Diabetes (38.8 percent); Coronary heart disease (23.4 percent); Smoking (21.6 percent); Heart failure (12.3 percent); Atrial fibrillati­on (10.5 percent); and Atrial flutter (1.4 percent) The researcher­s found that all the risk factors, except diabetes, rose significan­tly between 2000 and 2016. What is puzzling, Zafar says, is that during the same period, primary care doctors were becoming much more proactive in urging their patients to adopt healthier lifestyles. Why would

Native American health measures have declined in those years?

“We want to dig deeper into assessing why a majority of our Native American population still has a risk factor that explains their stroke,” says Zafar, an assistant professor of neurology. Further research will include more recent data and other types of stroke, he says.

“The strength of the epidemiolo­gical studies is defining what the future of the health care system will be,” Zafar says. “I’m really confident that this result will help us shape how we intervene in the Native American population from a health care standpoint.”

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