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(Hypertension. 2003;42:453.)
© 2003 American Heart Association, Inc.
Brief Review |
From the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institutes Framingham Study and the Department of Preventive Medicine, Boston University, Boston, Mass.
Correspondence to William B. Kannel, MD, Framingham Heart Study, 73 Mt Wayte Ave, Suite 2, Framingham, MA 01702-5827. E-mail billkannel@yahoo.com
Key Words: blood pressure cardiovascular disease hypertension, detection and control systole risk factors
An extract of the first 250 words of the full text is provided, because this article has no abstract. |
| Introduction |
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Their conclusion derives from the use of "logistic splines" methodology to examine the relation of systolic blood pressure (SBP) to CVD and all-cause mortality. They contend that previous linear logistic analysis depicting a continuous, graded relation is misleading and that there is actually a threshold at the 70th percentile of SBP for a person at a given age and sex. They also suggest that because BP increases steadily with age, the threshold also increases with age.2 By inference, Port et al seem to suggest that we to return to the discarded concept that a "normal" systolic pressure is, roughly, "100+ years of age mm Hg." They focus on all-cause mortality because "it is most free of misclassifications and, importantly the number of events is sufficiently high to allow accurate estimates of the shape of the relation with systolic blood pressure." However, the more relevant outcome is CVD mortality
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