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Published Online
on December 27, 2005

Hypertension. 2005
Published online before print December 27, 2005, doi: 10.1161/01.HYP.0000199103.40105.b5
A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2006
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Submitted on October 23, 2005
Revised on November 9, 2005

Risk Factors for Arterial Hypertension in Adults With Initial Optimal Blood Pressure. The Strong Heart Study

Giovanni de Simone*; Richard B. Devereux; Marcello Chinali; Mary J. Roman; Lyle G. Best; Thomas K. Welty; Elisa T. Lee; Barbara V. Howard; for the Strong Heart Study Investigators

From the Weill Medical College (G.d.S., R.B.D., M.J.R.), Cornell University, New York, NY; Federico II University Hospital (G.d.S., M.C.), Naples, Italy; Missouri Breaks Industries Research (L.G.B., T.K.W.), Timber Lake, SD; Center for American Indian Health Research (E.T.L.), University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, Okla; and Medstar Research Institute (B.V.H.), Washington, DC.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: simogi{at}unina.it.

Abstract--Whether metabolic factors and their change over time influence development of arterial hypertension in adults with initially optimal blood pressure (BP) is unknown. We analyzed associations of BP in the optimal range (<120/80 mm Hg), metabolic risk factors, and their changes over 4-year follow-up, with 8-year incident hypertension, in a cohort of American Indians with a high prevalence of obesity. At baseline, 967 participants with optimal BP and no prevalent cardiovascular disease (69.5% women; mean age, 54±7 years) were evaluated and reexamined after 4 (second examination) and 8 years to evaluate predictors of 8-year incident arterial hypertension. In participants with normal glucose tolerance, baseline BP and decrease in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol from baseline to the second examination were the most potent predictors of 8-year arterial hypertension (both P<0.0001), with additional effects of baseline waist circumference and its increase, increase in BP, and presence of diabetes at the second examination (all P<0.04). In participants with impaired glucose tolerance or diabetes, the most potent predictor of 8-year incident hypertension was diabetes at the second examination (P<0.0001) followed by a increase in BP and LDL cholesterol over the first 4 years (both P<0.001). Thus, incident arterial hypertension can be predicted by initial metabolic profile and unfavorable metabolic variations over time, in addition to initial BP. At optimal levels of initial BP, increasing abdominal obesity, and abnormal lipid profile are major predictors of development of arterial hypertension. Possible implications of these findings for primary cardiovascular prevention should be tested in prospective studies.


Key words: metabolism • insulin resistance • lipids • lipoproteins • population • risk factors




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