| Literature DB >> 23573414 |
Patricio López-Jaramillo1, Carlos Velandia-Carrillo, Julie Alvarez-Camacho, Daniel Dylan Cohen, Tatiana Sánchez-Solano, Gabriela Castillo-López.
Abstract
Hypertension is a chronic disease with global prevalence and incidence rapidly increasing in low and medium income countries. The surveillance of cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypertension, is a global health priority in order to estimate the burden and trends, to appropriately direct resources, and to measure the effect of interventions. We propose here that the adoption of Western lifestyles in low and middle incomes countries has dramatically increased the prevalence of abdominal obesity, which is the main source of proinflammatory cytokines, and that the vascular systemic inflammation produced by adipose tissue contributes to the development of hypertension. The concentration of proinflammatory cytokines is higher in the Latin American population than that reported in developed countries, suggesting a higher susceptibility to develop systemic low-degree inflammation at a given level of abdominal obesity. These particularities are important to be considered when planning resources for health care programs. Moreover, studying these singularities may provide a better understanding of the causes of the burden of cardiovascular risk factors and the remarkable variability in the prevalence of these medical conditions within and between countries.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23573414 PMCID: PMC3618944 DOI: 10.1155/2013/492094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hypertens Impact factor: 2.420
Regional differences in the risk of stroke associated with hypertension (Adapted from: “O'Donnell, et al. [9]”).
| Region | Risk of stroke associated with self-reported hypertension or blood pressure > 160/90 |
|---|---|
| Africa ( | 4.96 (3.11–7.91) |
| Southeast Asia ( | 4.49 (3.54–5.70) |
| India ( | 4.36 (3.34–5.69) |
| South America ( | 3.52 (1.63–7.60) |
| High income countries ( | 2.79 (1.83–4.25) |
Data are odds ratio (99% CI). Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan, and Uganda. ‡China, Malaysia, and Philippines. †Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru. *Australia, Canada, Croatia, Denmark, Germany, Iran, and Poland.
Figure 1Early programming inducing stressors lead to alterations in gene expression (such as methylation of DNA or modification of histones) on phenotype producing persistent influences on metabolism. The conflict between the earlier programming and the later presence of abdominal obesity may have produced a higher sensitivity of this population to develop a state of low degree inflammation, insulin resistance and, consequently, an epidemic of hypertension, diabetes, and CVD.
Ethnic differences in main pro-inflammatory cytokines.
| Study | Subjects | Marker | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albert et al. | 24,455 White, Hispanic, and Asian adult females. Health Study in the United States. | CRP | Median/interquartile range (IQR) | Black women had significantly higher values of CRP than White, Hispanic, and Asian. |
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| Chandalia et al. | 137 South Asian and White adult males | CRP | Mean: | Asian Indians had significantly higher concentrations of hs-CRP than Caucasians. |
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| McDade et al. | 229 Black, White, and Hispanic adult. | CRP | Median/(IQR) | Black had significantly higher CRP concentrations than the other groups. |
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| Schutte et al. | 217 Black and White adult females. POWIRS study. | CRP | Mean ± SD | Black women had significantly higher hs-CRP levels compared to white women. |
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| Patel et al. | 1083 Black and White adults. Bogalusa Heart Study. | CRP | Mean ± SD | Black had significantly higher CRP values than Whites. |
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| Khera et al. | 2,749 White and Black adults. Dallas Heart Study. | CRP | Median | Significantly higher CRP values in blacks. |
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| Ford et al. | 2205 Whites, Black, and Mexican American adult females. | CRP | Mean | Significantly higher CRP in Mexican-American women than White women. |
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| Ford et al. | 1940 White, Black, Mexican, and other American adults. | CRP | Median: | No significant differences between ethnicities. |
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| LaMonte et al. | 135 Black, Native and White adult females. | CRP |
Mean ± SD | Significantly higher CRP concentrations among Black compared with Native and White. |
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Elkind et al. | 279 Hispanic, Black, and White American adult. Northern Manhattan Stroke Study. | CRP | Mean ± SD | There were some differences in levels of marker by ethnicity but none were statistically significant. |
| TNF- | White: 2.71 ± 4.25 pg/mL | |||
| IL-6 | White: 1.15 ± 1.08 pg/mL | |||
| IL-1 | White: 0.23 ± 0.43 pg/mL | |||
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| Wener et al. | 22,000 multiethnic individuals age ≥ 4 yrs. Third National Health and Nutrition Evaluation Survey (NHANES III). | CRP | 95th percentile value | The values for Mexican-Americans and non-Hispanic whites were similar, compared with non-Hispanic black adults females, who had higher levels. |
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| Chatha et al. | 191 White and Indo-Asian. British adults. | CRP | Mean ± SD | Serum CRP concentrations were similar in Indo-Asians and White. |
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| Chambers et al. | 1532 Asians and White. British adults. | CRP | Mean ± SD: | Significantly higher CRP concentration in Asians compared with whites. |
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| Forouhi et al. | 113 adult South Asian and White British adults. | CRP | Mean | Median CRP level in South Asian women was nearly double that in European women. ( |
| CRP | Mean | Afro-Caribbean had significantly higher TNF- | ||
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Kalra et al. | 160 Black and White. British adults. | IL-6 | Whites: 1.5 pg/mL | No significance in CRP levels despite elevated IL-6 and TNF- |
| TNF- | Whites: 4.3 ± 3.6 mg/m/L | CRP was significantly lower in Black men and women than in other ethnic groups. | ||
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| Heald et al. | 440 White, Pakistani, and Black British adults. | CRP | Mean | |
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| Mwantembe et al. | 72 Black and White adults. | IL-1 | Mean ± SD | No significant differences |
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| Petersen et al. | 482 South-Asians and | IL-6 | Mean: | Significantly higher IL-6 concentrations in South-Asians compared with White men. |
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| Albandar et al. | 228 White, Hispanic, Black adults. | IL-1 | Mean: | Hispanics had higher IL-1beta concentrations than Blacks. |
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| Hong et al. | 70 White, Black American Adults. | IL-6 | Mean: | No significant differences between ethnicities. |
Pro-inflammatory cytokines in children and adolescents.
| Study | Subjects | Marker | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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López-Jaramillo, et al. | 325 schoolchildren (mean age, 10.0 years) from Colombia | CRP | Mean (mg/dL) ± SD | CRP levels correlate significantly with BMI. ( |
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| Gillum | 996 Mexican American children aged 6–11 years. | CRP | Detectable CRP was seen in 34.7% of overweight children but only 6.8% of other children ( | CRP levels correlate significantly with BMI. ( |
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| Visser et al. | 3512 American children (8 to 16 years of age). | CRP | Percentile value CRP (mg/dL) | CRP levels correlate significantly with BMI. ( |
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| Cook et al. | 699 (10 to 11 years of age) multiethnic study in children. | CRP | Median mg/L | CRP was strongly related to adiposity (95% CI, 155–439%) and was higher in South Asian children. |
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| Ford | 3348 White, Black and Mexican-American US children and young adults. | CRP | Median | No significant differences between ethnicities. |
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Aeberli et al. [ | 33 Swiss children (6 to 14 years of age). Normal-weight ( | CRP | CRP median (mg/dL) | CRP, IL-6 increased significantly ( |
| IL-6 | Overweight: 0.34 (0.05–1.81) | |||
| TNF- | Overweight: 6.3 (4.2–11.8) | |||
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| Weiss et al. | 439 White, Black and Hispanic, obese, overweight and nonobese American children and adolescents. | CRP | Mean CRP (mg/dL), | Interleukin-6 and CRP were significantly related to the degree of obesity ( |
| IL-6 | Blacks moderately obese: 1.89 | |||
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| Vikram et al. | 62 Indian adolescents | CRP | Mean (mg/dL) ± SD | CRP levels correlate significantly with BMI ( |