Blood pressure in the Caribbean

Authors
Citation
Ra. Halberstein, Blood pressure in the Caribbean, HUMAN BIOL, 71(4), 1999, pp. 659-684
Citations number
102
Categorie Soggetti
Medical Research General Topics
Journal title
HUMAN BIOLOGY
ISSN journal
00187143 → ACNP
Volume
71
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
659 - 684
Database
ISI
SICI code
0018-7143(199908)71:4<659:BPITC>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
A review of original and published data yields the consistent finding that chronic hypertension is endemic and prevalent throughout the Caribbean area . The prominent involvement of genetics is suggested in several lines of ev idence, including significant ethnic differences in blood pressure values, higher incidence in smaller isolated island populations, the discovery of p olymorphic blood proteins that appear to be linked to hypertension suscepti bility, and the slavery hypothesis of natural selection favoring a salt-con serving physiology in ancestral populations. Environmental factors-climatic , demographic, and cultural-exert strong influences on blood pressure level s and hypertension etiology in the Caribbean. Salt intake and other dietary behaviors, degree of community awareness of the disease, and differential treatment modalities are related to hypertension epidemiology in indigenous and migrant Caribbean populations. The traditional use of medicinal plants , historically successful in part because of the beneficial bioactivity of many antihypertensive phytochemical components, has been recently supplemen ted with the widespread introduction of synthetic biomedical drugs. Prospec tive research strategies are recommended that might further elucidate the c omplex gene-environment interactions contributing to blood pressure variati on and hypertension patterns in the Caribbean region.