Risk profile in hypertension genesis: A five-year follow-up study

被引:37
作者
Ducher, Michel
Fauvel, Jean-Pierre
Cerutti, Catherine
机构
[1] Hop Edouard Herriot, MA, Dept Nephrol, UMR 103, Lyon, France
[2] Univ Lyon 1, Equipe Accueil Genom Fonct Atherothrombose, EA 3740, Lyon, France
关键词
stress; job strain; cluster; epidemiology; baroreflex; hypertension;
D O I
10.1016/j.amjhyper.2005.07.019
中图分类号
R6 [外科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100210 ;
摘要
Background: Pathogenesis of primary hypertension remains unclear, because many heterogeneous factors (diet, physiologic, and psychological factors) are simultaneously involved. We have conducted an original analysis to study the influence of the combination of these factors on BP evolution. Methods: Seven homogeneous clusters were constituted from 213 healthy normotensive subjects taking into account 10 variables. Those variables used to cluster homogeneous "risk profiles" are usually considered as potential risk factors for hypertension: age, body mass index, alcohol consumption, sodium/potassium urinary ratio, systolic blood pressure (SBP) and heart rate response to mental stress, baroreflex sensitivity (BRS), job demand, job latitude, and behavioral pattern (personality score). Five-year BP evolution (Delta SBP or Delta diastolic BP [DBP]) was compared between risk profiles. Results: Four clusters of subjects representing about 50% of the population had a significantly higher 5-year Delta SBP (>= 5 mm Hg) compared to the 5-year Delta SBP of the two clusters in which SBP did not increase. These four clusters had a low BRS. Two profiles that group six unfavorable risk factors had the most detrimental 5-year Delta SBP. Interestingly, perceived high job demand in a cluster of younger subjects with a high personality score and a low BRS had also a detrimental SBP evolution. Conclusions: The major interest of this study is to highlight that hypertension development is not univocal between subjects and that different combinations of factors could explain differential BP evolution in groups of subjects sharing the same risk profile. A lower BRS was a consistent predictor for detrimental 5-year BP evolution.
引用
收藏
页码:775 / 780
页数:6
相关论文
共 31 条
[11]   Psychological variables in hypertension: Relationship to casual or ambulatory blood pressure in men [J].
Friedman, R ;
Schwartz, JE ;
Schnall, PL ;
Landsbergis, PA ;
Pieper, C ;
Gerin, W ;
Pickering, TG .
PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE, 2001, 63 (01) :19-31
[12]   TYPE-A BEHAVIOR, PERSONALITY, AND SYMPATHETIC RESPONSE [J].
HOWARD, JH ;
RECHNITZER, PA ;
CUNNINGHAM, DA ;
WONG, D ;
BROWN, HA .
BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 1990, 16 (04) :149-160
[13]   Elevated blood pressure and personality: A meta-analytic review [J].
Jorgensen, RS ;
Johnson, BT ;
Kolodziej, ME ;
Schreer, GE .
PSYCHOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 1996, 120 (02) :293-320
[14]   JOB DECISION LATITUDE, JOB DEMANDS, AND CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE - A PROSPECTIVE-STUDY OF SWEDISH MEN [J].
KARASEK, R ;
BAKER, D ;
MARXER, F ;
AHLBOM, A ;
THEORELL, T .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1981, 71 (07) :694-705
[15]   Reactivity as a predictor of subsequent blood pressure - Racial differences in the Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study [J].
Knox, SS ;
Hausdorff, J ;
Markovitz, JH .
HYPERTENSION, 2002, 40 (06) :914-919
[16]   Spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity: toward an ideal index of cardiovascular risk in hypertension? [J].
Lantelme, P ;
Khettab, F ;
Custaud, MA ;
Rial, MO ;
Joanny, C ;
Gharib, C ;
Milon, H .
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2002, 20 (05) :935-944
[17]   High stress responsivity predicts later blood pressure only in combination with positive family history and high life stress [J].
Light, KC ;
Girdler, SS ;
Sherwood, A ;
Bragdon, EE ;
Brownley, KA ;
West, SG ;
Hinderliter, AL .
HYPERTENSION, 1999, 33 (06) :1458-1464
[18]   Impairment in cardiac autonomic regulation preceding arterial hypertension in humans - Insights from spectral analysis of beat-by-beat cardiovascular variability [J].
Lucini, D ;
Mela, GS ;
Malliani, A ;
Pagani, M .
CIRCULATION, 2002, 106 (21) :2673-2679
[19]   Hemodynamic and autonomic adjustments to real life stress conditions in humans [J].
Lucini, D ;
Norbiato, G ;
Clerici, M ;
Pagani, M .
HYPERTENSION, 2002, 39 (01) :184-188
[20]  
Lynch J, 1997, CIRCULATION, V96, P302