Literature DB >> 22233935

About the need to use specific population references in estimating paediatric hypertension: Sardinian blood pressure standards (age 11-14 years).

Pier Paolo Bassareo1, Andrea Raffaele Marras, Giuseppe Mercuro.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous Italian paediatric blood pressure (BP) tables overestimated the prevalence of hypertension in adolescents of specific geographic areas, such as Sardinia, an island in the Mediterranean Sea. This is probably due to a not very homogeneous distribution of the subjects studied, most from Middle and Northern Italy, and the long period from the survey.
METHODS: BPs were repeatedly measured over a period of 3 years in 839 children (52.6% males. Age range: from 11 to 14 years during this period), using a standard mercury sphygmomanometer. For each gender, the specific percentile curves of systolic and diastolic BP were constructed.
RESULTS: (corrected by the 50th percentile of height): males (11-14 YEARS): mean systolic BP (50th centile): from 111 to 115 mmHg. Hypertensive systolic BP (> 95th percentile): from 127 to 135 mmHg. Mean diastolic BP (50th centile): from 65 to 69 mmHg. Hypertensive diastolic BP (> 95th percentile): from 78 to 82 mmHg. Females (11-14 YEARS): mean systolic BP (50th centile): from 110 to 112 mmHg. Hypertensive systolic BP (> 95th percentile): from 127 to 130 mmHg. Mean diastolic BP (50th centile): from 65 to 67. Hypertensive diastolic BP (> 95th percentile): from 78 to 80 mmHg.
CONCLUSIONS: Sardinian BP tables emphasizes the need to integrate the previous standards with more up-to-date and representative reports on Italian children, as periodically performed in the USA, in order to increase the number of subjects to be checked, and to obtain a national coverage better and more completely representative of every geographic area of our country.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22233935      PMCID: PMC3275472          DOI: 10.1186/1824-7288-38-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ital J Pediatr        ISSN: 1720-8424            Impact factor:   2.638


  20 in total

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9.  Hypertension prevalence and blood pressure levels in 6 European countries, Canada, and the United States.

Authors:  Katharina Wolf-Maier; Richard S Cooper; José R Banegas; Simona Giampaoli; Hans-Werner Hense; Michel Joffres; Mika Kastarinen; Neil Poulter; Paola Primatesta; Fernando Rodríguez-Artalejo; Birgitta Stegmayr; Michael Thamm; Jaakko Tuomilehto; Diego Vanuzzo; Fenicia Vescio
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2003-05-14       Impact factor: 56.272

10.  Blood pressure to height ratios as simple, sensitive and specific diagnostic tools for adolescent (pre)hypertension in Nigeria.

Authors:  Chukwunonso E C C Ejike
Journal:  Ital J Pediatr       Date:  2011-06-24       Impact factor: 2.638

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  4 in total

Review 1.  Strengths and limitations of current pediatric blood pressure nomograms: a global overview with a special emphasis on regional differences in neonates and infants.

Authors:  Massimiliano Cantinotti; Raffaele Giordano; Marco Scalese; Sabrina Molinaro; Bruno Murzi; Nadia Assanta; Maura Crocetti; Marco Marotta; Sergio Ghione; Giorgio Iervasi
Journal:  Hypertens Res       Date:  2015-04-16       Impact factor: 3.872

Review 2.  Pediatric hypertension: An update on a burning problem.

Authors:  Pier Paolo Bassareo; Giuseppe Mercuro
Journal:  World J Cardiol       Date:  2014-05-26

3.  Pediatric hypertension in the Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia.

Authors:  Shaea A Alkahtani
Journal:  Saudi Med J       Date:  2015-06       Impact factor: 1.484

4.  [Study of obesity in a rural children population and its relationship with anthropometric variables].

Authors:  Manuel Vaquero-Álvarez; Manuel Romero-Saldaña; Joaquin Valle-Alonso; Francisco Jesús Llorente Cantarero; Isabel María Blancas-Sánchez; Francisco Javier Fonseca Del Pozo
Journal:  Aten Primaria       Date:  2018-05-19       Impact factor: 1.137

  4 in total

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