BMJ 2004;328:324-325 (7 February), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7435.324
Paper
Blood pressure, haemorrhagic stroke, and ischaemic stroke: the Korean national prospective occupational cohort study
Yun-Mi Song, epidemiologist1,
Joohon Sung, epidemiologist2,
Debbie A Lawlor, lecturer in public health4,
George Davey Smith, professor of clinical epidemiology4,
Youngsoo Shin, epidemiologist3,
Shah Ebrahim, professor of epidemiology of ageing4
1 Department of Family Medicine, Samsung Medical Center, SungKyunKwan University School of Medicine, 50 Irwon-Dong, Gangnam-Gu, Seoul, Korea,
2 Department of Preventive Medicine, Kangwon National University College of Medicine, Hyoja-2-Dong, Chunchon, Kangwon-Do, Korea,
3 Department of Health Policy and Management, College of Medicine, Seoul National University, 28 Yeongeon-dong, Jongno-Gu, Seoul,
4 Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 2PR
Correspondence to: S Ebrahim shah.ebrahim{at}bristol.ac.uk
Introduction
Deaths from haemorrhagic stroke declined consistently through
the 20th century, but deaths from ischaemic stroke showed a
rise and fall, mirroring the coronary heart disease epidemic.
1 Blood pressure has also declined,
2 and if blood pressure is
more strongly associated with haemorrhagic stroke than with
ischaemic stroke, this might contribute to the divergent trends.
Previous meta-analyses have shown contradictory findings; one
showed similar associations for both stroke subtypes,
3 and another,
of Asian studies, showed a stronger association with haemorrhagic
stroke than with ischaemic stroke.
4 To resolve this uncertainty,
we examined the association of blood pressure with subtype of
stroke in a large cohort of Korean civil servants.
Participants, methods, and results
The Korean National Health System for public servants and teachers
provides medical expenses and biennial multiphasic health examinations
at which blood pressure is measured in the seated position by
trained staff using a standard mercury sphygmomanometer (fifth
Korotkoff sound used for diastolic pressure) or an electronic
manometer.
5 We grouped mean blood pressures for individuals
between 1986 and 1996 according to the joint national committee
on prevention, detection, and treatment of high blood pressure
categories of normal, stages 1, 2, and 3 (
table). We included
deaths attributed to ICD-10 (international classification of
diseases, 10th revision) codes of I60-I69 for all strokes, I61
for haemorrhagic stroke, and I63 and I67.8 for ischaemic strokes
between 1991 and 2000 in these analyses. We categorised non-fatal
strokes using data on the use of medical care and found an accuracy
of 83.4% and 85.7% for ischaemic stroke and haemorrhagic stroke.
View this table:
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Mean blood pressure and stroke subtype from the Korean National Health System Study, 1986-2000. Data are adjusted relative risks (95% confidence intervals) unless otherwise indicated*
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In 9.5 million person years of observation of 955 271 people; they had 14 057 strokes, giving crude and age standardised incidences of 1.48 and 2.24 for every 1000 person years. Of these, 10 716 (76%) strokes had complete information on major exposure variables and we included these in our analyses; we classified 2695 strokes as haemorrhagic, 5326 as ischaemic, 1731 as undetermined, and 964 as subarachnoid haemorrhage.
We calculated fully adjusted relative risks and 95% confidence intervals using logistic regression. The gradient of risk with blood pressure was steeper for fatal than non-fatal stroke, reflecting a relative excess of haemorrhagic strokes among fatal events. Both ischaemic stroke and haemorrhagic stroke had strong gradients with blood pressure, but these were much steeper for haemorrhagic stroke with a stage 3 category relative risks of 9.56 (95% confidence interval 8.46 to 10.80) and 28.83 (24.89 to 33.40) for ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes. For each higher 20 mm Hg of systolic blood pressure, the relative risk of ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke increased by 2.23 (2.17 to 2.30) and 3.18 (3.06 to 3.30), z test for difference between odds ratios 11.40, P < 0.00001. Those excluded because of incomplete data had similar distributions of stroke subtypes, and including them in analyses resulted in similar age-sex adjusted blood pressure gradients.
Comment
The gradient of the relationship between blood pressure and
haemorrhagic stroke is steeper than that for ischaemic stroke.
Falls in blood pressure observed over the 20th century may lead
to bigger reductions in the incidence of haemorrhagic stroke
compared with ischaemic stroke and thereby provide a partial
explanation for the differential trends in stroke subtypes.
1 Falls in blood pressure cannot be ascribed solely to antihypertensive
drugs as they have been seen at young ages and during times
when treatment was not widely used. Factors in early life, rather
than treatment of hypertension, may have contributed to population
declines in both blood pressure and risk of stroke, particularly
haemorrhagic. Our findings also emphasise the importance of
controlling blood pressure, particularly in countries with a
high risk of haemorrhagic stroke.
Contributors: Y-MS contributed to design, analysis, interpretation
and revision of the manuscript JS contributed to design, interpretation
and revision of the manuscript YS contributed to interpretation
and revision of the manuscript. DAL contributed to the design,
interpretation, and revision of the manuscript. GDS contributed
to the design, interpretation, and revision of the manuscript.
SE wrote the first draft of the paper and contributed to design,
interpretaton, and revision of the manuscript. Y-MS and SE are
guarantors.
Funding: Korean Ministry of Health and Welfare (01-PJ1-PG1-01CH10-0007).
Competing interests: None declared.
Ethical approval: Korean Health iNsurance Corporation, who are legally able to use health insurance data for public health purposes.
References
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(Accepted 16 September 2003)

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