People younger than age 40 who have high blood
pressure are at increased risk of heart failure, strokes and blood
vessel blockages as they age, according to a study in JAMA led by Duke Health.
The study, which used new guidelines issued in 2017 that lowered the
clinical definition of high blood pressure from earlier levels,
suggests that identifying and treating the condition in younger people
might have long-term benefit.
"This is a first step in assessing whether high blood pressure, as
defined by the new criteria, is something that younger people should be
concerned about as a potential precursor to serious problems," said lead
author Yuichiro Yano, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor in the
Department of Community & Family Medicine at Duke.
"Although this is an observational study, it demonstrates that the
new blood pressure guidelines are helpful in identifying those who might
be at risk for cardiovascular events," Yano said.
Yano and colleagues analyzed more than 4,800 adults who had blood
pressure measurements taken before age 40 as part of the Coronary Artery
Risk Development in Young Adults study (CARDIA), which began in 1985.
About half of participants were African-American, and 55 percent were
women.
Study participants were sorted into four groups based on blood
pressure levels set in 2017 by the American College of Cardiology and
the American Heart Association: Normal (120 or lower systolic blood
pressure over 80 diastolic or less); elevated (120-129 over less than
80); stage 1 hypertension (130-139 over 80-89); or stage 2 hypertension
(140 or greater over 90 or greater).
The researchers then tracked whether these participants had serious
cardiovascular events over a median follow-up period of about 19 years.
In all, 228 incidents occurred, with successively higher rates of events
coinciding with successively higher blood pressure levels.
"Among young adults, those with elevated blood pressure, stage 1
hypertension, and stage 2 hypertension before age 40, as defined by the
2017 guidelines, had significantly higher risk for subsequent
cardiovascular disease events, compared to those with normal blood
pressure before age 40," Yano said.
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