High Blood Pressure May Be Especially Lethal For Blacks

TUESDAY, April 10 (HealthDay News) — 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.
Researchers found this was true regardless of blacks’ other risk factors, such as age, gender, family history, weight, diabetes or pre-existing heart disease.
Researchers examined 533 black and 8,660 non-black patients with high blood pressure and followed them for five years. Sudden cardiac death occurred in 178 patients, including 17 blacks and 161 non-blacks. After adjusting for risk factors such as age, sex, body mass index (a measure of body fat based on height and weight), diabetes and history of heart disease, the study revealed black patients had a two-fold greater risk of sudden cardiac death.
In sudden cardiac death, the heart unexpectedly stops beating, causing blood flow to the brain and organs to stop. If blood flow isn’t restored through CPR or defibrillation, death occurs within minutes.
The study appears in the April issue of HeartRhythm.
“The truly unique outcome of our study is the indication that black patients may be at a higher risk of [sudden cardiac death], but not because of other more well-known risk factors,” study lead author Dr. Peter Okin, a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College and an attending physician at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, said in a journal news release.
While the study found an association between sudden cardiac death and high blood pressure, it did not prove a cause-and-effect relationship.
More research is needed to explore the genetic, structural and functional differences involved in the higher incidence of sudden cardiac death in black people with high blood pressure, the researchers said.
SOURCE: The Heart Rhythm Society, news release, April 6, 2012
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. |
|
|
| Black Stroke Survivors Face Greater Risk From High Blood Pressure |
|
|
| Black people who survived strokes caused by bleeding in the brain were more likely than whites to have high blood pressure a year later – increasing their risk of another stroke, according to a study in the American Heart Association journal Stroke. |
|
|
| 9 In 10 Blacks With High Blood Pressure Have Early Heart Disease |
|
|
| High blood pressure is strongly associated with heart disease in black Americans, new research shows. |
|
|
| What African Americans With Diabetes Or High Blood Pressure Need To Know |
|
|
| Diabetes and high blood pressure can damage the kidneys and lead to kidney disease. You need to get checked for kidney disease if you have one of these conditions. Here are some other reasons to get checked: |
|
|
| List Of Sugar Names And Sugar Facts |
|
|
| This list of sugar facts and sugar names will help you uncover the many hidden sugars that are tucked away everywhere in our food today. |
|
|
| Sugar Addicts Guide To Overcoming Sugar Addiction |
|
|
| How does the sugar industry create sugar addicts? First of all, by denying that “sugar addiction” even exists. And secondly, by hiding sugar’s increasing existence in just about everything we eat. Why else would they call sugar names like “evaporated cane juice” or “Florida Crystals”? Sugar, by any other name, still addicts the same. |
|
|
| “Refined” Bad Carb Sweet Sugar Death |
|
|
| Sweet sugar death, including “death by chocolate”, is no laughing matter. And sugar is just one of the “refined” bad carb culprits in our society. |
|
|
| Halle Berry Talks About Living With Diabetes |
|
|
| “Diabetes caught me completely off guard,” she explains. “None of my family had suffered from the illness and although I was slightly overweight in school, I thought I was pretty healthy. “I thought I could tough it out, but I couldn’t have been more wrong,” she says. “One day, I simply passed out, and I didn’t wake up for seven days, which is obviously very serious.” |
|
|
| How To Avoid Diabetes And Reverse Diabetes Type 2 |
|
|
| Do you know how to avoid diabetes? How about how to reverse diabetes naturally? The problem is no one’s allowed to tell you that you can usually avoid diabetes and sometimes even reverse diabetes naturally. |
|
|