Author:
Hashimoto Shigeatsu,Nagai Masato,Ohira Tetsuya,Fukuma Shingo,Hosoya Mitsuaki,Yasumura Seiji,Satoh Hiroaki,Suzuki Hitoshi,Sakai Akira,Ohtsuru Akira,Kawasaki Yukihiko,Takahashi Atsushi,Okazaki Kanako,Kobashi Gen,Kamiya Kenji,Yamashita Shunichi,Fukuhara Shun-ichi,Ohto Hitoshi,Ohto Hitoshi,Abe Masafumi,Yamashita Shunichi,Kamiya Kenii,Yasumura Seiji,Hosoya Mitsuaki,Ohtsuru Akira,Sakai Akira,Suzuki Shinichi,Yabe Hirooki,Maeda Masaharu,Matsui Shirou,Fujimori Keiya,Ishikawa Tetsuo,Ohira Tetsuya,Watanabe Tsuyoshi,Satoh Hiroaki,Suzuki Hitoshi,Kawasaki Yukihiko,Takahashi Atsushi,Ozasa Kotaro,Kobashi Gen,Hashimoto Shigeatsu,Suzuki Satoru,Fukushima Toshihiko,Midorikawa Sanae,Shimura Hiromi,Mashiko Hirofumi,Goto Aya,Nollet Kenneth Eric,Niwa Shinichi,Takahashi Hideto,Shibata Yoshisada,
Abstract
Abstract
Aim
After the Great East Japan Earthquake, over 160,000 residents in Fukushima Prefecture were forced to evacuate the area around the Fukushima Daiichi power plant following nuclear accident there. Health problems in these evacuees have since become a major issue. We have examined the association between evacuation and incidence of hyperuricemia among residents in Fukushima.
Methods
We conducted a cohort study of residents aged 40–90 years without hyperuricemia at the time of the Fukushima disaster. Among 8173 residents who met the inclusion criteria before the disaster, 4789 residents (men: 1971, women: 2818; follow-up duration: 1.38 years; and follow-up rate: 58.6%) remained available for follow-up examinations at the end of March 2013. The main endpoint was incidence of hyperuricemia, defined by the Japanese committee guidelines, using local health data from before and after the disaster. We divided participants by evacuation status and compared outcomes between groups. Using a logistic regression model, we estimated the odds ratio for incidence of hyperuricemia, adjusting for potential confounders, age, gender, waist circumference, physical activity, and alcohol consumption.
Results
Incidence of hyperuricemia was higher in evacuees (men 10.1%; women 1.1%) than in non-evacuees (men 7.4%, women 1.0%). Evacuees had higher body mass index, waist circumference, triglycerides, LDL-cholesterol, fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c, and lower HDL-cholesterol after the disaster than non-evacuees. We found that evacuation was associated with incidence of hyperuricemia (adjusted odds ratio: 1.38; 95% confidence interval: 1.03–1.86).
Conclusion
This is the first study to demonstrate an association between evacuation after a disaster and increased incidence of hyperuricemia.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Physiology (medical),Nephrology,Physiology