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Prehypertension In Young Linked With Heart Enlargement


Prehypertension In Young Linked With Heart Enlargement
High blood pressure and prehigh blood pressure in adolescents and young adults was linked to a higher risk of having an abnormally enlarged heart, scientists report in Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association.

In a study of American Indians, average age 26.5, those with high blood pressure or prehigh blood pressure were more likely to have changes in the heart structure linked to increased cardiovascular risk: higher left ventricular wall thickness, higher left ventricular mass and higher prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy. The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy was three times higher among those with high blood pressure and two times higher among those with prehypertension, in comparison to those with normal blood pressure.

Left ventricular hypertrophy is an abnormal thickening of the muscles of the heart's left ventricle (main pumping chamber). It is linked to heart and blood vessel complications, such as heart failure.

"The findings are a wake-up call for increased preventive measures to head off heart disease with lifestyle modifications, such as reducing caloric intake and increasing physical activity in this population," said Richard B. Devereux, M.D., senior study author and professor of medicine at Weill Medical College of Cornell University in New York City.

"At these younger ages, the increasing prevalence of early-onset high blood pressure and prehigh blood pressure is linked to changes in the heart that are correlation to worsened prognosis for heart disease, disability and death," he said.

Prehigh blood pressure is defined as systolic blood pressure higher than 120 mmHg but lower than 140 mmHg, or a diastolic pressure greater than 80 mmHg but lower than 90 mmHg, or both. High blood pressure is defined as a systolic blood pressure greater than 140 mmHg or a diastolic blood pressure greater than 90 mmHg. Prehigh blood pressure is a relatively new category of blood pressure established by the Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC-7). Devereux said this is the first large population-based study to examine the heart changes linked to the new JNC-7 category of hypertension.

"Prior research has found little difference comparing middle-aged to elderly overweight hypertensive white, black and American-Indian adults, suggesting that Indian populations are not unique, and may provide a preview of what other populations may experience as overweight and obesity rates increase," he said.

Scientists analyzed the association of prehigh blood pressure and early-onset high blood pressure with clinical characteristics and changes in heart structure and function in 1,944 participants (57.5 percent women) of the Strong Heart Study, a research study that's ongoing of cardiovascular risk factors and disease in 13 American-Indian communities.

In data collected from health examinations conducted between July 2001 and September 2003, scientists found early-onset high blood pressure in 294 participants (15 percent) and prehigh blood pressure in 675 participants (35 percent).

Both hypertensive and prehypertensive participants were more likely to be men, obese, have diabetes, and have impaired fasting glucose. Hypertensive and prehypertensive participants had higher average pulse pressure (the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure values), stroke volume index (correlation to the volume of blood the heart pumps out at each beat), and total peripheral resistance index (a reflection of how constricted peripheral blood vessels are - peripheral constriction causes blood pressure to rise). There was an early prevalence of increased arterial stiffness with multiple features correlation to insulin resistance.

"The frequency of heart abnormalities in these younger participants is similar to that found in the middle-age or adult population of hypertensives who are at risk for adverse events," Devereux said.

Jennifer S. Drukteinis, M.D., lead author of the study and an internal medicine resident at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, said the implications are clear: "There needs to be vigilant monitoring of blood pressure at younger and younger ages. Obesity and hypertension go hand-in-hand, and lifestyle modification is the key".

Other co-authors are: Mary J. Roman, M.D.; Richard R. Fabsitz, Ph.D.; Elisa T. Lee, Ph.D.; Lyle G. Best, M.D.; and Marie Russell, M.D.


Posted by: April    Source