Low Birth Weight Tied to High BP in Adulthood
Reuters | Sep 22, 2006
Reuters- New York
New research hints that the lower the birth weight, the higher the blood pressure as an adult -- and the link becomes stronger with age. Dr. Anna A. Davies and her associates at the University of Bristol, UK, are studying the origins of adult hypertension (high blood pressure) using a large database of 25,874employees, average age 38 years, who underwent pre-employment screening for a large British company.
Birth weights were established by recall for most employees. Overall, age- and sex-adjusted systolic blood pressure (the upper number in a standard reading) dropped 0.8 millimeters mercury (mmHg) for every 1 kg increase in birth weight. For the 744 subjects with birth weight records, systolic blood pressure dropped 1.4 mmHg for every 1 kg increase in birth weight, investigators report.
For subjects older than 55 years, blood pressure change was33.9 mmHg for each 1 kg increase in birth weight. Because of the "robust" association between birth weight and blood pressure for subjects with birth weight records in the UK study, the investigators believe that other studies showing a weaker association may be the result of recall bias.
"Further research is required to elucidate whether this birth weight association with adult blood pressure reflects intrauterine programming, a common genetic mechanism...the influence of post-natal growth and development or biologic interactions between these potential mechanisms," the authors write in the journal Hypertension.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr. David J. P. Barker of Oregon Health and Science University in Portland comments that the increasing strength of the link "is consistent with the existence of self-perpetuating cycles of rising blood pressure and renal damage."
SOURCE: Hypertension September 2006.
New research hints that the lower the birth weight, the higher the blood pressure as an adult -- and the link becomes stronger with age. Dr. Anna A. Davies and her associates at the University of Bristol, UK, are studying the origins of adult hypertension (high blood pressure) using a large database of 25,874employees, average age 38 years, who underwent pre-employment screening for a large British company.
Birth weights were established by recall for most employees. Overall, age- and sex-adjusted systolic blood pressure (the upper number in a standard reading) dropped 0.8 millimeters mercury (mmHg) for every 1 kg increase in birth weight. For the 744 subjects with birth weight records, systolic blood pressure dropped 1.4 mmHg for every 1 kg increase in birth weight, investigators report.
For subjects older than 55 years, blood pressure change was33.9 mmHg for each 1 kg increase in birth weight. Because of the "robust" association between birth weight and blood pressure for subjects with birth weight records in the UK study, the investigators believe that other studies showing a weaker association may be the result of recall bias.
"Further research is required to elucidate whether this birth weight association with adult blood pressure reflects intrauterine programming, a common genetic mechanism...the influence of post-natal growth and development or biologic interactions between these potential mechanisms," the authors write in the journal Hypertension.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr. David J. P. Barker of Oregon Health and Science University in Portland comments that the increasing strength of the link "is consistent with the existence of self-perpetuating cycles of rising blood pressure and renal damage."
SOURCE: Hypertension September 2006.












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