Despite encouraging trends over the past three decades, coronaryheart disease remains the leading cause of death in the UnitedStates and other industrialized countries. Recent data fromthe National Center for Health Statistics and the National Heart,Lung, and Blood Institute1 emphasize the full dimensions ofthis health problem, revealing that nearly 13 million Americanshave coronary heart disease and that 7.5 million have had amyocardial infarction. Because there are 1.1 million myocardialinfarctions in the United States alone each year and because450,000 of them represent recurrent infarctions, which carryan inherently greater risk of death and . . . [Full Text of this Article]
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