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Submitted on June 17, 2008
From the Department of Preventive Cardiology (Y. Kokubo, T.O., M.W., A.H., A.O.), and the Division of Hypertension and Nephrology (K. Kamide, Y. Kawano), National Cardiovascular Center, Osaka, Japan; The Suita Medical Association (K. Kawanishi), Osaka, Japan; and the Japan Anti-Tuberculosis Association (A.O.), Tokyo, Japan. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ykokubo{at}hsp.ncvc.go.jp.
Abstract—Few prospective studies have examined the association between high-normal blood pressure and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in Asia. We examined the impact of high-normal blood pressure on the incidence of CVD in a general urban population cohort in Japan. We studied 5494 Japanese individuals (ages 30 to 79 years without CVD at baseline) after completing a baseline survey who received follow-up through December 2005. Blood pressure categories were defined on the basis of the ESH-ESC 2007 criteria. In 64 391 person-years of follow-up, we documented the incidence of 346 CVD events. The frequencies of high-normal blood pressure and hypertension Stage 1 and Stage
Revised on July 7, 2008
Impact of High-Normal Blood Pressure on the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease in a Japanese Urban Cohort. The Suita Study
Yoshihiro Kokubo*;
2 were 18.0%, 20.1%, and 10.1% for men and 15.9%, 15.6%, and 8.8% for women, respectively. Antihypertensive drug users were also classified into the baseline blood pressure categories. Compared with the optimal blood pressure group, the multivariable hazard ratios (95% CIs) of CVD for normal and high-normal blood pressure and hypertension Stage 1 and Stage
2 were 2.04 (1.19 to 3.48), 2.46 (1.46 to 4.14), and 2.62 (1.59 to 4.32), and 3.95 (2.37 to 6.58) in men and 1.12 (0.59 to 2.13), 1.54 (0.85 to 2.78), 1.35 (0.75 to 2.43), and 2.86 (1.60 to 5.12) in women, respectively. The risks of myocardial infarction and stroke for each blood pressure category were similar to those of CVD. Population-attributable fractions of high-normal blood pressure and hypertension for CVD were 12.2% and 35.3% in men and 7.1% and 23.4% in women, respectively. In conclusion, high-normal blood pressure is a risk factor for the incidence of stroke and myocardial infarction in a general urban population of Japanese men.
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