Jon B Rasmussen1,2, David L Mwaniki3, Lydia U Kaduka3, Mike K Boit4, Knut Borch-Johnsen5, Henrik Friis6, Dirk L Christensen1. 1. Global Health Section, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. 2. Department of Internal Medicine, Endocrinology Unit, Copenhagen University Hospital, Herlev, Denmark. 3. Centre for Public Health Research, KEMRI, Nairobi, Kenya. 4. Department of Recreation Management and Exercise Science, Kenyatta University, Nairobi, Kenya. 5. Department of administration, Copenhagen University Hospital, Holbaek, Denmark. 6. Department of Human Nutrition and Sports Science, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The association between blood levels of hemoglobin (B-hgb) and blood pressure (BP) has been widely investigated in Caucasians and Asians but there is a paucity of data in rural black Africans. The objective was to investigate the association between B-hgb and BP in a rural black African population. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted in three districts in Kenya (Bondo, Kitui, and Transmara) with the inclusion of participants aged ≥17 years. Background information, anthropometry, BP, B-hgb, hepatic insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR), standard lipid profile, and oral glucose tolerance test were obtained in each participant. RESULTS: Background characteristics among 1,167 participants showed that anemic and non-anemic participants differed significantly from each other as there were more women, lower body mass index and waist circumference (WC), lower degree of hepatic insulin resistance and plasma cholesterols among the anemic participants. Furthermore, anemic participants had significantly lower systolic and diastolic BP (P < 0.01) but not a significantly different prevalence of hypertension (P = 0.08). Multivariate linear regression models adjusted for-age, sex, plasma total-cholesterol, WC, Log2(HOMA2-IR), ethnicity, and smoking status-revealed that B-hgb (per mmol/l increment) was significantly associated with systolic BP (estimate: 1.18 (0.37-1.98)) and diastolic BP (estimate: 1.06 (0.54-1.57)) (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: B-hgb is associated with BP in rural black Africans.
OBJECTIVES: The association between blood levels of hemoglobin (B-hgb) and blood pressure (BP) has been widely investigated in Caucasians and Asians but there is a paucity of data in rural black Africans. The objective was to investigate the association between B-hgb and BP in a rural black African population. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted in three districts in Kenya (Bondo, Kitui, and Transmara) with the inclusion of participants aged ≥17 years. Background information, anthropometry, BP, B-hgb, hepatic insulin resistance (HOMA2-IR), standard lipid profile, and oral glucose tolerance test were obtained in each participant. RESULTS: Background characteristics among 1,167 participants showed that anemic and non-anemicparticipants differed significantly from each other as there were more women, lower body mass index and waist circumference (WC), lower degree of hepatic insulin resistance and plasma cholesterols among the anemicparticipants. Furthermore, anemicparticipants had significantly lower systolic and diastolic BP (P < 0.01) but not a significantly different prevalence of hypertension (P = 0.08). Multivariate linear regression models adjusted for-age, sex, plasma total-cholesterol, WC, Log2(HOMA2-IR), ethnicity, and smoking status-revealed that B-hgb (per mmol/l increment) was significantly associated with systolic BP (estimate: 1.18 (0.37-1.98)) and diastolic BP (estimate: 1.06 (0.54-1.57)) (P < 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: B-hgb is associated with BP in rural black Africans.
Authors: Jacob Plange-Rhule; Sally M Kerry; John B Eastwood; Frank B Micah; Sampson Antwi; Francesco P Cappuccio Journal: Int J Hypertens Date: 2018-04-05 Impact factor: 2.420
Authors: Karl G Reis; Bernard Desderius; Justin Kingery; Annet Kirabo; Abel Makubi; Christina Myalla; Myung Hee Lee; Saidi Kapiga; Robert N Peck Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) Date: 2020-08-20 Impact factor: 3.738