DIETARY CATION INTAKE AND BLOOD-PRESSURE IN BLACK GIRLS AND WHITE GIRLS

Citation
Ja. Simon et al., DIETARY CATION INTAKE AND BLOOD-PRESSURE IN BLACK GIRLS AND WHITE GIRLS, American journal of epidemiology, 139(2), 1994, pp. 130-140
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
ISSN journal
00029262
Volume
139
Issue
2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
130 - 140
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9262(1994)139:2<130:DCIABI>2.0.ZU;2-O
Abstract
The authors examined the relative importance of dietary sodium, potass ium, calcium, and magnesium intakes as correlates of blood pressure in a cross-sectional analysis of 987 black and 1,043 white 9- and 10-yea r-old girls from Richmond, California, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Washingto n, DC, who were enrolled in the National Heart, Lung, and Brood Instit ute Growth and Health Study between January 1987 and May 1988. Dietary intake was measured using a 3-day food record. Dietary cation intake was not associated with blood pressure in black girls. An inverse asso ciation between magnesium intake and diastolic (fifth Korotkoff phase) blood pressure was found in white girls (p < 0.01). After controlling for factors often associated with blood pressure, such as pulse rate, body mass index, and household income, the authors found that dietary magnesium intake (range, 53-511 mg/day) continued to be associated wi th diastolic (fifth Korotkoff phase) blood pressure in white girls, su ch that each 100-mg/day increase in intake was associated with a 3.22- mmHg decrease in diastolic pressure (95% confidence interval -5.70 to -0.75). However, after adjustment for dietary fiber intake, the author s were no longer able to discern an association between dietary magnes ium intake and blood pressure. They conclude that the body mass index and pulse rate are the strongest correlates of blood pressure in 9- an d 10-year-old black girls and white girls and that studies examining t he relation between dietary magnesium and blood pressure should contro l for the effects of dietary fiber intake.