Colorado School of Public Health, Aurora, 80045, USA.
Ann Epidemiol. 2012 Aug;22(8):554-61. doi: 10.1016/j.annepidem.2012.04.021. Epub 2012 Jun 9.
Previous reports have described favorable changes in the relationship between systolic blood pressure and age in recent birth cohorts. The obesity epidemic might threaten that pattern.
To update analyses of differences between birth cohorts in the relationship between systolic blood pressure and age and to determine whether increases in obesity have had adverse effects.
We examined the systolic blood pressure distributions across birth cohorts born between 1890 and 1990 in 68,070 participants, aged 18-74 years, in the National Health (and Nutrition) Examination Surveys between 1960 and 2008. We postulated that age-adjusted 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles of systolic blood pressure had decreased in more recent versus earlier cohorts, and that this pattern had slowed or reversed recently due, at least in part, to obesity.
After adjusting for gender, race, age and age(2), the 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles of systolic blood pressure were 1.1, 1.4, 1.9, 2.5, and 3.4 mmHg lower for each decade more recently born (all P < .0001). Quadratic terms for birth cohort were positive and significant (P < .001) across all percentiles, consistent with a decelerating cohort effect. Mediation of this deceleration was observed for body mass index ranging from 20.4% to 44.3% (P < .01 at all percentiles).
More recent cohorts born in the United States between 1890 and 1990 have had smaller increases in systolic blood pressure with aging. At any age, their systolic blood pressure distributions are shifted lower relative to earlier cohorts. Decreases of 1.9 mmHg in the median systolic blood pressure per decade translates into 11.4-13.3 mmHg over 6-7 decades, a shift that would contribute importantly to lower rates of cardiovascular diseases. These favorable changes are slowing, perhaps owing, at least in part, to the obesity epidemic.
先前的报告描述了在最近的出生队列中,收缩压与年龄之间的关系发生了有利的变化。肥胖流行可能会威胁到这种模式。
更新分析收缩压与年龄之间的关系在不同出生队列之间的差异,并确定肥胖的增加是否产生了不良影响。
我们在 1960 年至 2008 年期间进行的国家健康(和营养)调查中,检查了 68070 名 18-74 岁的参与者中出生于 1890 年至 1990 年的不同出生队列的收缩压分布情况。我们假设,与较早的队列相比,最近出生的队列的收缩压第 10、25、50、75 和 90 百分位数有所下降,并且由于肥胖等原因,这种模式最近已经放缓或逆转。
在调整了性别、种族、年龄和年龄平方后,每十年出生更近的队列的收缩压第 10、25、50、75 和 90 百分位数分别低 1.1、1.4、1.9、2.5 和 3.4mmHg(均 P<0.0001)。出生队列的二次项为正值且显著(P<0.001),这与减速的队列效应一致。对于体重指数范围为 20.4%至 44.3%的队列效应,这种减速是有中介作用的(在所有百分位数上均 P<0.01)。
1890 年至 1990 年期间在美国出生的最近出生的队列,收缩压随年龄的增长而增加的幅度较小。在任何年龄,他们的收缩压分布相对于早期队列都较低。每十年收缩压中位数下降 1.9mmHg,相当于 6-7 十年下降 11.4-13.3mmHg,这种转变将对降低心血管疾病的发病率有重要贡献。这些有利的变化正在放缓,这也许是由于肥胖流行的原因。