Blacks Develop High Blood Pressure A Year Ahead Of Whites

TUESDAY, Sept. 13 (HealthDay News) — It’s well known that blacks are at greater risk for developing high blood pressure than whites are, but new research now suggests they also progress more rapidly from a pre-hypertension state to full-blown high blood pressure.
The findings, published online and in the October print issue of Hypertension, suggest that intervening earlier with medication, as well as lifestyle changes, may help prevent high blood pressure and some of its consequences among people who are at the greatest risk.
Pre-hypertension is defined as a systolic (pumping) pressure between 120 and 139, and a diastolic (resting) reading between 80 and 89. High blood pressure (or hypertension) is a blood pressure reading of 140/90 or higher. A blood pressure reading of less than 120/80 is considered ideal.
Researchers analyzed electronic medical records of 18,865 adults aged 18 to 85 from 197 health clinics in the southeastern United States between 2003 and 2009. Thirty percent of the study participants were black.
According to the findings, blacks had a 35 percent greater risk of progressing from pre-hypertension to hypertension and tended to develop the condition up to one year earlier than their white counterparts. Exactly why this occurs is not fully understood.
“This means the well-known end-points of hypertension — such as kidney failure, stroke, heart failure — could occur faster in blacks than in whites,” said study author Anbesaw Selassie, an epidemiologist at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston.
Race was not the only risk factor seen in the new study. Other individuals who were at increased risk for rapid progression to hypertension included those with systolic blood pressure ranging from 130 to 139, as well as those participants aged 75 and older. Other risk factors include being overweight or obese and having type 2 diabetes.
In high-risk individuals, “it is time to seriously consider the use of safe and cheap blood pressure-lowering medicines to arrest the progression of pre-hypertension,” Selassie said.
Previous research has demonstrated that such early therapeutic preventive measures are “effective, practical, and cost-effective if one considers the cost of caring for hypertension and its complications,” Selassie added.
“This is very important information,” said Dr. Stephen Green, the chief of cardiology at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, N.Y. “Blacks with pre-hypertension develop high blood pressure quicker than whites,” he said.
Lifestyle changes, like losing weight if you are overweight or obese, consuming less salt and eating a healthy diet can help lower this risk. The most widely recommended diet to lower blood pressure is the DASH diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension), which focuses on fruits and vegetables, low-fat or non-fat dairy products and whole grains, he added.
Still, Green noted, “we should be more aggressive with medication in people who are at high risk.”
SOURCES: Stephen Green, M.D., chief of cardiology, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, N.Y.; Anbesaw Selassie, Dr.P.H., epidemiologist, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, S.C.; Sept. 12, 2011, Hypertension, online
HealthDay
| Tips For Minorities: Prevent High Blood Pressure |
|
|
| A recent study shows that hospitalization due to high blood pressure is more common among African Americans. Learn what you can do to reduce your risk of developing high blood pressure. |
|
|
| Blacks With Kidney Disease Should Watch For Blood Pressure Shifts |
|
|
| Large day-to-day blood pressure changes in blacks with kidney disease are associated with an increased risk of premature death, a new study suggests. |
|
|
| Vitamin D Supplements Tied To Lower Blood Pressure In Blacks |
|
|
| Black Americans who take vitamin D supplements may significantly lower their blood pressure, a new study suggests. |
|
|
| Blacks And Hypertension Link Persists Across Age And Economic Status |
|
|
| African-Americans are at higher risk for developing hypertension than Whites or Mexican Americans, even if they’ve managed to avoid high blood pressure earlier in life. |
|
|
| High Blood Pressure Poses Bigger Stroke Risk For Blacks, Study Says |
|
|
| Black people are known to be at greater risk for high blood pressure, and now a new study suggests that this places them at an even higher risk for stroke. |
|
|
| Can the African-American Diet be Made Healthier Without Giving up Culture? |
|
|
| Soul food signifies the history of African-Americans in America and is seen as an integral part of Black culture. Unfortunately, soul food is not a healthy type of food, and African-Americans have some of the highest rates of obesity and heart disease because of eating this type of food. |
|
|
| Obese Black Kids More Susceptible To Hypertension |
|
|
| A new study suggests that obese black children have a significantly greater risk for high blood pressure than white children of comparable age and weight. |
|
|
| Blacks Less Likely to Stick to High Blood Pressure Diet |
|
|
| People who stick with the so-called “DASH diet” achieve significant reductions in blood pressure, but blacks are less likely than whites to adopt the diet, researchers have found. |
|
|
| American Children Eat As Much Salt As Adults, CDC Finds |
|
|
| According to new findings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that were published online Monday in the journal Pediatrics, American children eat as much salt as adults — about 1,000 milligrams too much, or the same amount as in just one Big Mac. |
|
|
| Stress Adds To Salt Load Of Some Blacks |
|
|
| Stress causes the bodies of some black people to retain as much salt as eating an order of french fries, which boosts their blood pressure and increases their risk for cardiovascular disease, a new study finds. |
|
|
| High Blood Pressure May Be Especially Lethal For Blacks |
|
|
| Black people with high blood pressure are twice as likely to suffer sudden cardiac death than whites or other racial groups who suffer hypertension, according to a new study. |
|
|
| Sex, Race, Place Of Residence Influence High Blood Pressure Incidence |
|
|
| High blood pressure may help to explain why deaths from heart disease and stroke vary according to geography, race and sex, researchers reported in Hypertension: Journal of the American Heart Association. |
|
|
| Race, Sex Play Part In Hypertension Risk |
|
|
| A new study finds that race, gender and where you live strongly affect your risk for high blood pressure, which is a major risk factor for heart disease and stroke. |
|
 |
| How To Lower Your Blood Pressure Naturally |
|
|
| Learning how to lower blood pressure naturally is simple. But to naturally lower blood pressure takes commitment to a healthier lifestyle. Why should you bother? |
|
|
| Life Expectancy For U.S. Blacks Shorter Than That Of Whites |
|
|
| White men in the United States live an average of about seven years longer than black men, while white women live more than five years longer than black women, a new study shows. |
|
|