A Longitudinal Study of Resting Heart Rate and Violent Criminality in More Than 700 000 Men
Among men, low resting heart rate in late adolescence was associated with an increased risk for violent criminality, nonviolent criminality, exposure to assault, and unintentional injury in adulthood. Most of these results were replicated with low systolic blood pressure.
Cohort Study
2 effects
35 years
700000 subjects