Literature DB >> 15837946

Origins of the "black/white" difference in blood pressure: roles of birth weight, postnatal growth, early blood pressure, and adolescent body size: the Bogalusa heart study.

J K Cruickshank1, F Mzayek, L Liu, L Kieltyka, R Sherwin, L S Webber, S R Srinavasan, G S Berenson.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The determinants of differences in blood pressure that emerge in adolescence between black Americans of predominantly African descent and white Americans of predominantly European descent are unknown. One hypothesis is related to intrauterine and early childhood growth. The role of early blood pressure itself is also unclear. We tested whether differences in birth weight and in carefully standardized subsequent measures of weight, height, and blood pressure from 0 to 4 or 5 years were related to black/white differences in blood pressure in adolescence. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Two Bogalusa cohorts who had complete follow-up data on birth weights and early childhood and adolescent anthropometric and blood pressure measures were pooled. One hundred eighty-five children (48 black and 47 white boys and 41 black and 49 white girls) were followed up and studied after 15 to 17 years. Birth weights were a mean 443 and 282 g lower in black boys and girls, respectively, than in whites (P<0.001). Blood pressures in adolescence were 3.4/1.9 and 1.7/0.6 mm Hg higher, respectively, and tracked from early childhood. In regression analyses, birth weight accounted for the ethnic difference in adolescent blood pressure, which was also independently predicted, in decreasing impact order, by adolescent height, adolescent body mass index, and systolic blood pressure at 4 to 5 years and inversely by growth from 0 to 4 to 5 years.
CONCLUSIONS: If these results can be replicated in larger and independent samples, they suggest that efforts to improve intrauterine growth in black infants as well as lessen weight gain in adolescence might substantially reduce excess high blood pressure/hypertension in this ethnic group.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15837946     DOI: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000161960.78745.33

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  36 in total

1.  Origins of disparities in cardiovascular disease: birth weight, body mass index, and young adult systolic blood pressure in the national longitudinal study of adolescent health.

Authors:  Liana J Richardson; Jon M Hussey; Kelly L Strutz
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2011-04-16       Impact factor: 3.797

2.  Fetal growth and the ethnic origins of type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Michael R Skilton
Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2015-01-08       Impact factor: 10.122

3.  Racial Disparities in Blood Pressure Trajectories of Preterm Children: The Role of Family and Neighborhood Socioeconomic Status.

Authors:  Thomas E Fuller-Rowell; David S Curtis; Pamela K Klebanov; Jeanne Brooks-Gunn; Gary W Evans
Journal:  Am J Epidemiol       Date:  2017-05-15       Impact factor: 4.897

4.  Prenatal cocaine exposure and BMI and blood pressure at 9 years of age.

Authors:  Seetha Shankaran; Carla M Bann; Charles R Bauer; Barry M Lester; Henrietta S Bada; Abhik Das; Rosemary D Higgins; W Kenneth Poole; Linda L LaGasse; Jane Hammond; Eunice Woldt
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2010-06       Impact factor: 4.844

Review 5.  Influence of race, ethnicity and socioeconomic status on kidney disease.

Authors:  Rachel E Patzer; William M McClellan
Journal:  Nat Rev Nephrol       Date:  2012-06-26       Impact factor: 28.314

6.  Race-specific relationship of birth weight and renal function among healthy young children.

Authors:  Andrea E Cassidy-Bushrow; Ganesa Wegienka; Charles J Barone; Rudolph P Valentini; Jerry Yee; Suzanne Havstad; Christine Cole Johnson
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2012-03-08       Impact factor: 3.714

Review 7.  Fetal programming and metabolic syndrome.

Authors:  Paolo Rinaudo; Erica Wang
Journal:  Annu Rev Physiol       Date:  2011-09-09       Impact factor: 19.318

8.  Birth weight was longitudinally associated with cardiometabolic risk markers in mid-adulthood.

Authors:  Fawaz Mzayek; J Kennedy Cruickshank; Doris Amoah; Sathanur Srinivasan; Wei Chen; Gerald S Berenson
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2016-08-10       Impact factor: 3.797

Review 9.  Hypertension and hypertensive heart disease in African women.

Authors:  Karen Sliwa; Dike Ojji; Katrin Bachelier; Michael Böhm; Albertino Damasceno; Simon Stewart
Journal:  Clin Res Cardiol       Date:  2014-01-28       Impact factor: 5.460

10.  The long-arm of adolescent weight status on later life depressive symptoms.

Authors:  Melissa L Martinson; Sarinnapha M Vasunilashorn
Journal:  Age Ageing       Date:  2016-03-13       Impact factor: 10.668

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