Greenlund Ian M, Kantas Dimitrios, Prakash Sakthi Surya, Bock Joshua M, Covassin Naima, Somers Virend K
Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA,
Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Am J Nephrol. 2024;55(6):629-637. doi: 10.1159/000540987. Epub 2024 Aug 24.
Cardiovascular health disparities are present within several minority communities, but it is unclear if such disparities are present in a growing African American subpopulation, Somali Americans, who differ genetically and culturally from African Americans of Western African ancestry. Ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring remains a gold standard measure to examine 24-h BP patterns to stratify cardiovascular risk profile. We sought to examine differences in the 24-h BP profile in a sample of young Somali Americans and compare their BP patterns to White study participants. We hypothesized that their BP and heart rate (HR) would be higher compared to closely matched White participants.
We recruited 50 participants (25 Somali) in whom BP recordings were obtained every 20 min throughout the entire 24-h monitoring period to quantify BP, HR, and ambulatory arterial stiffness. Daytime BP/HR was quantified between 10:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., and nighttime BP/HR was assessed between 12:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m.
Daytime BP and HR were similar between racial groups (p > 0.05). Nighttime BP was similar between groups (p > 0.05), but Somali American individuals exhibited a higher nocturnal HR compared to White participants (p = 0.013). Nocturnal dipping in diastolic BP and HR dipping was attenuated in Somali Americans compared to White adults (p = 0.038, 0.007). Somali participants also had higher ambulatory arterial stiffness (p = 0.045).
Twenty four-hour hemodynamics, specifically ambulatory arterial stiffness, nocturnal BP, and nocturnal HR, differ in young Somali Americans compared to White adults. These findings provide new insight into potential cardiovascular health disparities and future cardiovascular risk within the burgeoning Somali American community.
心血管健康差异存在于多个少数族裔社区,但尚不清楚在不断增长的非裔美国亚人群体——索马里裔美国人中是否存在此类差异,他们在基因和文化上与西非血统的非裔美国人不同。动态血压监测仍然是检查24小时血压模式以分层心血管风险状况的金标准方法。我们试图研究年轻索马里裔美国人样本中24小时血压状况的差异,并将他们的血压模式与白人研究参与者进行比较。我们假设与年龄匹配的白人参与者相比,他们的血压和心率会更高。
我们招募了50名参与者(25名索马里人),在整个24小时监测期间每20分钟记录一次血压,以量化血压、心率和动态动脉僵硬度。上午10:00至晚上8:00量化日间血压/心率,凌晨12:00至早上6:00评估夜间血压/心率。
不同种族之间的日间血压和心率相似(p>0.05)。不同组之间的夜间血压相似(p>0.05),但与白人参与者相比,索马里裔美国人夜间心率较高(p=0.013)。与白人成年人相比,索马里裔美国人的夜间舒张压下降和心率下降减弱(p=0.038,0.007)。索马里参与者的动态动脉僵硬度也较高(p=0.045)。
与白人成年人相比,年轻索马里裔美国人的24小时血液动力学存在差异,尤其是动态动脉僵硬度、夜间血压和夜间心率。这些发现为新兴的索马里裔美国社区潜在的心血管健康差异和未来心血管风险提供了新的见解。