The association of borderline hypertension with target organ changes and higher coronary risk. Tecumseh Blood Pressure study.
The Tecumseh project investigates the evolution of hypertension in a healthy population. Of 946 subjects aged 18 through 38 years, 124 had clinic blood pressure readings higher than 140/90 mm Hg (the mean for borderline hypertensive subjects was 130/94 mm Hg). Compared with normotensive subjects, borderline hypertensive subjects had higher home blood pressures (mean, 12/7 mm Hg higher). Their childhood and postpubertal blood pressures were elevated (6/4 mm Hg higher than normal at age 6 years and 12/7 mm Hg higher than normal at age 21 years), and hypertensive target organ changes were detected. Borderline hypertensive subjects also had elevated minimal forearm resistance (0.22 U higher than normal), decreased stroke index (1.8 mL/m2 lower than normal), and impaired ventricular diastolic relaxation (mitral Doppler peak early diastolic blood flow [E] to peak late diastolic blood flow [A] ratio 0.13 lower than normal). Borderline hypertensive subjects had significant abnormalities in other coronary risk factors (cholesterol levels were 0.39 mmol/L higher, triglyceride levels were 0.45 mmol/L higher, high-density lipoprotein levels were 0.08 mmol/L lower, insulin levels were 38 pmol/L higher, and 16.5% more of them were overweight). Borderline hypertension is neither transient nor innocuous. Its association with other predictors of atherosclerosis calls for clinical attention.[1]References
- The association of borderline hypertension with target organ changes and higher coronary risk. Tecumseh Blood Pressure study. Julius, S., Jamerson, K., Mejia, A., Krause, L., Schork, N., Jones, K. JAMA (1990) [Pubmed]
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