Annals of Global Health (Feb 2021)

Very Low Prevalence and Incidence of Atrial Fibrillation among Bolivian Forager-Farmers

  • Christopher J. Rowan,
  • Michael A. Eskander,
  • Edmond Seabright,
  • Daniel Eid Rodriguez,
  • Edhitt Cortez Linares,
  • Raul Quispe Gutierrez,
  • Juan Copajira Adrian,
  • Daniel Cummings,
  • Bret Beheim,
  • Kirsten Tolstrup,
  • Abinash Achrekar,
  • Thomas Kraft,
  • David E. Michalik,
  • Michael I. Miyamoto,
  • Adel H. Allam,
  • L. Samuel Wann,
  • Jagat Narula,
  • Benjamin C. Trumble,
  • Jonathan Stieglitz,
  • Randall C. Thompson,
  • Gregory S. Thomas,
  • Hillard S. Kaplan,
  • Michael D. Gurven

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5334/aogh.3252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 87, no. 1

Abstract

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Background: Atrial fibrillation is the most common arrhythmia in post-industrialized populations. Older age, hypertension, obesity, chronic inflammation, and diabetes are significant atrial fibrillation risk factors, suggesting that modern urban environments may promote atrial fibrillation. Objective: Here we assess atrial fibrillation prevalence and incidence among tropical horticulturalists of the Bolivian Amazon with high levels of physical activity, a lean diet, and minimal coronary atherosclerosis, but also high infectious disease burden and associated inflammation. Methods: Between 2005–2019, 1314 Tsimane aged 40–94 years (52% female) and 534 Moseten Amerindians aged 40–89 years (50% female) underwent resting 12-lead electrocardiograms to assess atrial fibrillation prevalence. For atrial fibrillation incidence assessment, 1059 (81% of original sample) Tsimane and 310 Moseten (58%) underwent additional ECGs (mean time to follow up 7.0, 1.8 years, respectively). Findings: Only one (male) of 1314 Tsimane (0.076%) and one (male) of 534 Moseten (0.187%) demonstrated atrial fibrillation at baseline. There was one new (female) Tsimane case in 7395 risk years for the 1059 participants with >1 ECG (incidence rate = 0.14 per 1,000 risk years). No new cases were detected among Moseten, based on 542 risk years. Conclusion: Tsimane and Moseten show the lowest levels of atrial fibrillation ever reported, 1/20 to ~1/6 of rates in high-income countries. These findings provide additional evidence that a subsistence lifestyle with high levels of physical activity, and a diet low in processed carbohydrates and fat is cardioprotective, despite frequent infection-induced inflammation. Findings suggest that atrial fibrillation is a modifiable lifestyle disease rather than an inevitable feature of cardiovascular aging.