| Literature DB >> 22432110 |
Julie K Bower1, Lawrence J Appel, Kunihiro Matsushita, J Hunter Young, Alvaro Alonso, Frederick L Brancati, Elizabeth Selvin.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Diabetes and hypertension often co-occur and share risk factors. Hypertension is known to predict diabetes. However, hyperglycemia also may be independently associated with future development of hypertension. We investigated glycated hemoglobin (HbA(1c)) as a predictor of incident hypertension. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We conducted a prospective analysis of 9,603 middle-aged participants in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study without hypertension at baseline. Using Cox proportional hazards models, we estimated the association between HbA(1c) at baseline and incident hypertension by two definitions 1) self-reported hypertension during a maximum of 18 years of follow-up and 2) measured blood pressure or hypertension medication use at clinic visits for a maximum of 9 years of follow-up.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22432110 PMCID: PMC3329825 DOI: 10.2337/dc11-2248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Care ISSN: 0149-5992 Impact factor: 19.112
Baseline (visit 2) participant characteristics, stratified by diabetes history status and HbA1c clinical category
Figure 1Fully adjusted HRs for incident self-reported hypertension among participants without (A) and with (B) prevalent diagnosed diabetes at baseline, as well as HRs for incident visit-based hypertension among participants without (C) and with (D) prevalent diagnosed diabetes at baseline using the restricted cubic spline model. *Adjusted for age, sex, race, center, smoking, physical activity, educational attainment, triglycerides (ln-transformed), BMI, and WHR. The top and bottom 1% values for HbA1c are truncated to exclude extreme values, and the model is centered at the median of the distribution (5.4% for participants without prevalent diabetes at baseline and 7.6% for participants with prevalent diabetes at baseline). HRs are plotted on the natural logarithm scale, and the grayed area represents the 95% CI.
HRs (95% CI) per 1% point of HbA1c for incident hypertension among ARIC Study participants, stratified by diabetes status at baseline
HRs (95% CI) for incident hypertension in participants with and without prevalent diabetes at baseline using HbA1c clinical categories