Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health University at Buffalo-SUNY Buffalo NY.
Department of Oral Biology and Buffalo Microbiome Center University at Buffalo-SUNY Buffalo NY.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2022 Mar 15;11(6):e021930. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.121.021930. Epub 2022 Mar 2.
Background Oral microbiota are thought to influence blood pressure (BP) regulation. However, epidemiological data supporting this hypothesis are limited. We examined associations between oral microbiota, BP, and incident hypertension in postmenopausal women. Methods and Results Baseline (1997-2001) examinations were completed on 1215 women (mean age, 63 years) during which subgingival plaque was collected, BP was measured, and medical and lifestyle histories and medication inventory were obtained. Microbiome composition of subgingival plaque was measured using 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicon sequencing. Baseline measured BP was defined as normotensive (systolic <120 mm Hg and diastolic <80 mm Hg, no BP medication use; n=429); elevated (systolic ≥120 mm Hg or diastolic ≥80 mm Hg, no medication use; n=306); or prevalent treated hypertension (history of physician diagnosis treated with medications; n=480). Incident hypertension (375 cases among 735 without baseline treated hypertension) was defined as newly physician-diagnosed hypertension treated with medication reported on annual health surveys (mean follow-up, 10.4 years). Cross-sectional analysis identified 47 bacterial species (of 245 total) that differed significantly according to baseline BP status (<0.05). Prospective analysis identified 15 baseline bacterial species significantly (<0.05) associated with incident hypertension: 10 positively (age-adjusted hazard ratios [HRs], 1.10-1.16 per SD in bacterial abundance) and 5 inversely (HRs, 0.82-0.91) associated. Associations were materially unchanged after further adjustment for demographic, clinical, and lifestyle factors; were similar when analysis was restricted to the normotensive group; and were of consistent magnitudes between strata of baseline age, smoking, body mass index, and BP categories. Conclusions Specific oral bacteria are associated with baseline BP status and risk of hypertension development among postmenopausal women. Research to confirm these observations and elucidate mechanisms is needed.
口腔微生物群被认为会影响血压(BP)调节。然而,支持这一假说的流行病学数据有限。我们研究了绝经后妇女口腔微生物群、BP 和高血压发病之间的关系。
在 1215 名女性(平均年龄 63 岁)中进行了基线(1997-2001 年)检查,在此期间收集了龈下菌斑,测量了 BP,并获得了医疗和生活史以及药物清单。使用 16S 核糖体 RNA 基因扩增子测序测量龈下菌斑的微生物组组成。将基线测量的 BP 定义为正常血压(收缩压<120mmHg 和舒张压<80mmHg,无 BP 药物治疗;n=429);升高(收缩压≥120mmHg 或舒张压≥80mmHg,无药物治疗;n=306);或已治疗的高血压(有医生诊断且接受药物治疗的病史;n=480)。高血压发病(在没有基线治疗高血压的 735 例患者中发生了 375 例)定义为通过年度健康调查报告的新诊断的药物治疗的高血压(平均随访 10.4 年)。横断面分析确定了 47 种细菌(共 245 种),根据基线 BP 状态(<0.05)显著不同。前瞻性分析确定了 15 种基线细菌与高血压发病显著相关(<0.05):10 种呈正相关(细菌丰度每标准差的校正危害比[HRs]为 1.10-1.16),5 种呈负相关(HRs 为 0.82-0.91)。进一步调整人口统计学、临床和生活方式因素后,关联基本不变;在正常血压组中分析结果相似;并且在基线年龄、吸烟、体重指数和 BP 分类的分层中,关联的幅度相似。
特定的口腔细菌与绝经后妇女的基线 BP 状态和高血压发病风险相关。需要进行研究来证实这些观察结果并阐明机制。