BLOOD-PRESSURE IN YOUTH FROM 4 ETHNIC-GROUPS - THE PASADENA-PREVENTION-PROJECT

Citation
Ar. Hohn et al., BLOOD-PRESSURE IN YOUTH FROM 4 ETHNIC-GROUPS - THE PASADENA-PREVENTION-PROJECT, The Journal of pediatrics, 125(3), 1994, pp. 368-373
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics
Journal title
ISSN journal
00223476
Volume
125
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
368 - 373
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3476(1994)125:3<368:BIYF4E>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
To explore the racial differences in blood pressure levels in American youth, and to extend current data to include youth of Asian, black, H ispanic, and non-Hispanic white descent, we recorded blood pressures a mong ninth graders during the spring of the years 1985 to 1989 in a su burb of Los Angeles. Trained observers, following a standardized proto col, obtained blood pressure measurements from 4577 students (39% blac k, 30% Hispanic, 21% white, 10% Asian; 50% female) with a mean age of 15 years. With the use of age- and sex-specific 90th percentiles repor ted in 1987 by the Second Task Force on Blood Pressure Control in Chil dren to define elevated blood pressure, the prevalence of elevated sys tolic blood pressure (SBP) was 8.1% (diastolic blood pressure (DBP), 9 .3%) among female subjects and 16.0% (DBP, 18.5%) among male subjects. Comparisons of the prevalence of elevated blood pressure among ethnic -racial groups within sexes were statistically significant only for As ian girls (SBP, 13.1%; DBP, 14.0%) relative to other female subjects ( SBP, 7.6%, p <0.005; DBP, 8.8%, p <0.01); these differences persisted after adjustment for body height and body mass index. A similar trend for Asian boys was apparent only for DBP (23.0% vs 18.0%, p = 0.065). Results for group means were comparable: average SBP and DBP were high er for Asian girls than for other ethnic groups. In addition, boys in this sample may have higher blood pressure than boys from other areas of the country. These results suggest that Asians in California may be at greater risk of having early development of hypertension.