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  #1   ^
Old Tue, Aug-03-04, 14:22
Dodger's Avatar
Dodger Dodger is online now
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Default U.S. Kids', Teens' Blood Pressure Up

U.S. Kids', Teens' Blood Pressure Up

Blacks, Mexican-Americans Have Greater Risk of High Blood Pressure

By Jeanie Lerche Davis
WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario, MD


May 4, 2004 -- Increasing numbers of teens and children have developed high blood pressure during the past decade, new research shows.





The trend is largely due to the obesity problem, writes lead researcher Paul Muntner, PhD, an epidemiologist with Tulane University in New Orleans.


His report appears in this week's issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association.


It's serious business since high blood pressure and heart disease are typically diseases of middle age. Studies show that blood pressure problems in childhood lead to high blood pressure in young adulthood, he writes.


Muntner's nationwide study looked at children's and adolescents' blood pressure readings taken in 1999 to 2000, comparing them with data on readings performed between 1988 and 1994.


He found that between the two time periods, systolic blood pressure (the top number in a blood pressure reading) increased an overall average of 1.4 points; diastolic blood pressure (the bottom number) increased 3.3 points.


The two blood pressure numbers reflect pressure against artery walls when blood is pumped through the body.


Muntner also found the most significant blood pressure increases occurred in all ethnic groups - non-Hispanic blacks and Mexican-Americans from 8 to 12 years old - but not in white children:
  • Non-Hispanic blacks had a 1.9-point increase in systolic blood pressure and a 4.1-point increase in diastolic readings.
  • Mexican-Americans had a 2.3-point increase in systolic blood pressure and a 4.4-point increase in diastolic readings.
  • Obesity caused 29% of the systolic and 12% of diastolic blood pressure increases.

"The strong association between [obesity] and systolic blood pressure among children and adolescents is worrisome," writes Muntner. His analysis "suggests that environmental factors other than increases in [obesity] are responsible for at least part of the increases in blood pressure among children and adults."


Diet and physical activity need attention in addressing this problem, he writes.


Muntner notes a problem with his study: His data are based on blood pressure readings taken at a single visit. More precise estimates would have been obtained during several visits. However, his study provides a credible snapshot of the high blood pressure problem in kids today, he writes.





SOURCES: Muntner, P. The Journal of the American Medical Association, May 5, 2004; vol 291: pp 2107-2113. WebMD Medical Reference from Healthwise: "What Is High Blood Pressure?"

</FONT>http://my.webmd.com/content/article...0000_1000_rs_01
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  #2   ^
Old Tue, Aug-03-04, 14:49
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Finestof07 Finestof07 is offline
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My mommy did my blood pressure last Friday. It was 124/86. The bottom number was just a tad bit high. But I did have an injury and that might have made my blood pressure higher than normal. O well.
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Old Tue, Aug-10-04, 00:43
cc48510 cc48510 is offline
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My Blood Pressure before LCing was in the 140s/90s. After 8 months of LCing it was 120/70. After about a year, it was in the 110/70, and just the other day (almost 2 years now) it was 109/63. My Heart Rate has also decreased from the 90s to the 60s...and that is not true Resting Heart Rate, because I had to walk to my truck, drive to the place, and walk into the building before get my BP/Pulse taken. In theory, it should be even lower if it was taken first thing in the morning before doing any physical activity.
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