• Title of article

    Temporal relation between blood pressure and serum creatinine in young adults from a biracial community : The Bogalusa heart study

  • Author/Authors

    Adel A. Youssef، نويسنده , , Sathanur R. Srinivasan، نويسنده , , Abdalla Elkasabany، نويسنده , , J. Kennedy Cruickshank، نويسنده , , Gerald S. Berenson، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    770
  • To page
    775
  • Abstract
    It is well recognized that end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is associated with accelerated and malignant hypertension. The association of renal disease and what is considered as normal blood pressure is still not clear. The present study examined the temporal relation between blood pressure and renal function reflected by serum creatinine in a biracial (black–white) community-based population enrolled in the Bogalusa Heart Study. The study included 662 young adults aged 19 to 32 years, (white men, n = 188; white women, n = 289; black men, n = 67; and black women, n = 118) who were followed for an average of 7.4 years. In black men, partial correlation adjusted for age, body mass index, serum glucose, uric acid, and cigarette smoking showed that baseline systolic and diastolic blood pressure are not significantly related to baseline serum creatinine, but significantly related to serum creatinine at follow-up (r = 0.38, P= .008 and r = 0.42, P= .003, respectively). Multivariate regression analysis further showed a significant prediction of serum creatinine at follow-up by baseline systolic and diastolic blood pressure (0.031 mg/dL and 0.037 mg/dL rise in follow-up serum creatinine for every 10 mm Hg increase in systolic (P= .000) and diastolic (P= .001) blood pressure at baseline, but not the other way around. Other race and sex groups did not show such significant temporal relations. We conclude that in young black men, higher blood pressure levels within normal range precede and explain part of the increase in serum creatinine, a measure of decline in renal function. Thus, our results underscore the beneficial effect of maintaining blood pressure levels lower than what is considered as the upper normal limit, particularly in black men.
  • Keywords
    Blood pressure , serumcreatinine , race (white–black) young adults. , Renal disease
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Hypertension
  • Serial Year
    2000
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Hypertension
  • Record number

    647619