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Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
Address reprint requests to: Kay B. Franz, PhD, RD, FACN, Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Science, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602. E-mail: kay_franz{at}byu.edu
Background: Geographical variations in deaths from heart disease and the prevalence of diabetes occur in the United States.
Methods: These geographical variations, by state, were compared to the tertiles of the Z-score (Z-climate) obtained from the mean annual temperature and precipitation, by state, and to the tertiles of the Z-score (Z-environment) obtained from six environmental factors, by state, in monovariant analyses of variance.
Results: Both Z-scores were significantly related to male heart deaths (Z-climate: p = 0.000009; Z-environment: p = 0.000043) with Z-climate being the most significant. Both Z-scores were significantly related to the 1998 prevalence of diabetes (Z-climate: p = 0.00018; Z-environment: p = 0.0059) with the climate again being the most significant.
Conclusions: Increased temperature can increase magnesium sweat losses, which may not be compensated by diet or water intake. Climate relationships to these diseases need further investigation.
Key words: heart disease, heart deaths, diabetes, climate, temperature, precipitation, magnesium
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