Return to site

Framingham Risk Score Calculator Pdf To Excel

broken image

 

 

View in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in ChineseView in Chinese Appears In Topics:  Please view graphics in the context of the topic in which they appear below. 

 Estimates 10-year risk of heart disease based on specific cardiovascular risk factors. 

It was developed by the Framingham Heart Study to assess the hard coronary heart disease outcome. It is used to estimate the risk of heart attacks in adults older than 20. In the below calculator enter your gender, age, cholestrol level, BP and you get the 'Framingham Risk Score' and the risk of developing CHD. May 01, 2017  Additionally, the Framingham risk score is designed to estimate coronary heart disease alone and does not predict other significant atherosclerotic outcomes, such as stroke.2.

In the text below the calculator you can read more about the scoring method and result interpretation.

The Framingham risk score calculator is based on a series of known cardiovascular risk factors that can indicate the 10-year risk of a patient to develop heart disease, especially coronary heart disease.

The risk factors have been identified during the Framingham Heart Study and include patient age and gender, hypertensive status, cholesterol determination and systolic pressure.Framingham Risk Score Chart

These are the possible Framingham scores and their associated cardiac risk percentages:Female resultsMale resultsPointsRisk percentagePointsRisk percentage<00%<00%0 - 8<1%0<1%9 - 121%1 - 41%13 - 142%5 - 62%153%73%164%84%175%95%186%106%198%118%2011%1210%2114%1312%2217%1416%2322%1520%2427%1625%≥25>30%≥17>30%Jump to:

1. Framingham score calculator

2. Framingham risk score explained

3. Result interpretation

4. About the study

5. High risk of CHD

6. References

Steps on how to print your input & results:

1. Fill in the calculator/tool with your values and/or your answer choices and press Calculate.

2. Then you can click on the Print button to open a PDF in a separate window with the inputs and results. You can further save the PDF or print it.

Please note that once you have closed the PDF you need to click on the Calculate button before you try opening it again, otherwise the input and/or results may not appear in the pdf.Framingham risk score explained

As a heart disease risk predictor, the Framingham score accounts for readily available patient data, cholesterol determinations and blood pressure, parameters that can offer an insight into the patient’s cardiovascular function.

The criteria are segmented by gender when calculating the final score. The risk predictor can be used for patients starting at 20 years of age, just to cover all risks, despite cardiac risk being proportional with patient age.

Total cholesterol values between 200 and 239 mg/dL are considered to carry borderline high risk whilst all values above 240 mg/dL carry high risk.

HDL cholesterol or the “good cholesterol” consists of high density lipoproteins that don’t stick to the arteries therefore do not form plaque or lead to atherosclerosis like low density lipoproteins (LDL) does.

HDL is also able to decrease part of circulating LDL. HDL values above 60 mg/dL are considered to protect against cardiovascular disease.

Hypertensive patients tend to be at higher risk of coronary artery disease (atherosclerosis). In the model, hypertension treatment is considered to lower this risk.

Systolic blood pressure, with the normal range between 90 and 120 mmHg, accounts for the force of contraction that pushes blood into circulation.

Smokers are at higher risk of angina, heart attack or stroke than non-smokers due to damage of the arterial lining, which leads to atheroma (narrowing arteries).

The answers that are input in the calculator are interpreted according to the range of values they belong to, and weigh differently in the final score.

It is important to note that there are separate values for males and females. The scorings are all explained in the tables below:AgeFemale ptsMale pts20 - 34-7-935 - 39-3-440 - 440045 - 493350 - 546655 - 598860 - 64101065 - 69121170 - 741412≥751613Total cholesterol mg/dLValueFemale ptsMale ptsAge interval: 20 - 39<16000160 - 19944200 - 23987240 - 279119≥2801311Age interval: 40 - 49<16000160 - 19933200 - 23965240 - 27986≥280108Age interval: 50 - 59<16000160 - 19922200 - 23943240 - 27954≥28075Age interval: 60 - 69<16000160 - 19911200 - 23921240 - 27932≥28043Age interval: ≥70<16000160 - 19910200 - 23910240 - 27921≥28021HDL cholesterol mg/dLValueFemale ptsMale pts≥60-1-150 - 590040 - 4911<4022SBP mmHg / treatedValueFemale ptsMale pts<12000120 - 12931130 - 13942140 -15952≥16063SBP mmHg / untreatedValueFemale ptsMale pts<12000120 - 12910130 - 13921140 -15931≥16042Smoking (if yes)AgeFemale ptsMale pts20 - 399840 - 497550 - 594360 - 6921≥7011Smoking (if no) 0 ptsResult interpretation

The Framingham risk predictor result is easy to interpret based on the following table that awards the heart disease risk in percentage, for the whole variety of possible results, for each gender:Female resultsMale resultsPointsRisk percentagePointsRisk percentage<00%<00%0 - 8<1%0<1%9 - 121%1 - 41%13 - 142%5 - 62%153%73%164%84%175%95%186%106%198%118%2011%1210%2114%1312%2217%1416%2322%1520%2427%1625%≥25>30%≥17>30%About the studyFramingham Risk Calculator

The Framingham risk score was created by Wilson et al. in 1998 following a study that examined the association of Joint National Committee (JNC-V) blood pressure and National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) cholesterol categories with CHD risk.

A cohort of 2,489 men and 2,856 women with ages between 30 and 74 took part in the study. The follow up period was of 12 years.

The 383 men and 227 women who developed CHD during the follow up period were associated with high blood pressure and high total cholesterol, amongst other factors.

The score was meant to allow physicians to predict multivariate coronary heart disease risk in patients without overt CHD.High risk of CHD

Individual cardiac risk can be variable during the patient’s life, meaning that healthy lifestyle choices can decrease it.

For example, quitting smoking, maintaining a healthy diet or regular exercise can decrease cardiac risk.

The opposite of the above healthy choices makes up some of the heart disease risk factors, along diabetes mellitus or family history of CHD.

The following table introduces four types of cardiovascular disease:Framingham Risk Score SheetGroup of diseaseExamplesCoronary heart disease (CHD)Myocardial infarction (MI) Heart failure (HF) Angina pectoris Coronary deathCerebrovascular diseaseTransient ischemic attack (TIA) StrokeAortic diseaseAortic atherosclerosis Thoracic aortic aneurysm Abdominal aortic aneurysmPeripheral arterial diseaseAlso known as peripheral vascular diseaseFramingham Risk Score Calculator Pdf To Excel OnlineOriginal source

Wilson PW, D'Agostino RB, Levy D, Belanger AM, Silbershatz H, Kannel WB. Prediction of coronary heart disease using risk factor categories. Circulation.1998; 97(18):1837-47.Other references

1. Vasan RS, Sullivan LM, Wilson PW, Sempos CT, Sundström J, Kannel WB, Levy D, D'Agostino RB. Relative importance of borderline and elevated levels of coronary heart disease risk factors. Ann Intern Med. 2005; 142(6):393-402.

2. D'Agostino RB, Sr. Vasan RS, Pencina M.J, Wolf PA, Cobain M, Massaro JM, Kannel WB. General cardiovascular risk profile for use in primary care: the Framingham Heart Study. Circulation. 2008; 117(6): 743–753.

 

 

 

 

broken image