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High altitude and blood pressure in children.

We aimed to evaluate the blood pressure of children who had similar demographic characteristics but lived at different altitudes. Blood pressure of the children attending primary schools in Izmir (sea level: n = 425) and Van (altitude: 1725 m, n = 291) were measured by mercurial sphygmomanometer for...

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Autores principales: Arslan, Sükrü, Arslan, Nur, Soylu, Alper, Akgün, Cihangir, Tepebasili, Ibrahim, Türkmen, Mehmet, Kavukçu, Salih
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2582720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15482651
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author Arslan, Sükrü
Arslan, Nur
Soylu, Alper
Akgün, Cihangir
Tepebasili, Ibrahim
Türkmen, Mehmet
Kavukçu, Salih
author_facet Arslan, Sükrü
Arslan, Nur
Soylu, Alper
Akgün, Cihangir
Tepebasili, Ibrahim
Türkmen, Mehmet
Kavukçu, Salih
author_sort Arslan, Sükrü
collection PubMed
description We aimed to evaluate the blood pressure of children who had similar demographic characteristics but lived at different altitudes. Blood pressure of the children attending primary schools in Izmir (sea level: n = 425) and Van (altitude: 1725 m, n = 291) were measured by mercurial sphygmomanometer for this study. They were similar with respect to age, sex, weight, height, and BMI. Mean age of the children was 10.51 +/- 0.87 years (range: 9 to 12 years), and 358 (50 percent) of them were female. Mean systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in the children living in Van than in the children living in Izmir (104.72 +/- 11.2 vs. 97.96 +/- 25.5 mmHg, respectively, p < .001). Similarly mean diastolic blood pressure was significantly higher in the children living in Van than in the children living in Izmir (63.98 +/- 9.3 vs. 59.91 +/- 10.0 mmHg, respectively, p < .001). When blood pressure was evaluated with regard to height percentile, the number of children with a blood pressure over 90 percentile were 19 (4.5 percent) and 48 (16.5 percent) for systolic blood pressure, and 25 (5.9 percent) and 37 (12.7 percent) for diastolic blood pressure among the children living in Izmir and Van, respectively (p < .001). Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were found to increase in parallel to the increase in body mass index in children living in Van (r = 0.358, p < .001 and r = 0.235, p < .001, respectively). However, blood pressures were not correlated to body mass index in children living in Izmir. A difference of 1700 m in altitude was associated with higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels in children with similar demographic characteristics, and at this altitude, body mass index and blood pressure showed a positive correlation.
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spelling pubmed-25827202008-11-13 High altitude and blood pressure in children. Arslan, Sükrü Arslan, Nur Soylu, Alper Akgün, Cihangir Tepebasili, Ibrahim Türkmen, Mehmet Kavukçu, Salih Yale J Biol Med Research Article We aimed to evaluate the blood pressure of children who had similar demographic characteristics but lived at different altitudes. Blood pressure of the children attending primary schools in Izmir (sea level: n = 425) and Van (altitude: 1725 m, n = 291) were measured by mercurial sphygmomanometer for this study. They were similar with respect to age, sex, weight, height, and BMI. Mean age of the children was 10.51 +/- 0.87 years (range: 9 to 12 years), and 358 (50 percent) of them were female. Mean systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in the children living in Van than in the children living in Izmir (104.72 +/- 11.2 vs. 97.96 +/- 25.5 mmHg, respectively, p < .001). Similarly mean diastolic blood pressure was significantly higher in the children living in Van than in the children living in Izmir (63.98 +/- 9.3 vs. 59.91 +/- 10.0 mmHg, respectively, p < .001). When blood pressure was evaluated with regard to height percentile, the number of children with a blood pressure over 90 percentile were 19 (4.5 percent) and 48 (16.5 percent) for systolic blood pressure, and 25 (5.9 percent) and 37 (12.7 percent) for diastolic blood pressure among the children living in Izmir and Van, respectively (p < .001). Systolic and diastolic blood pressures were found to increase in parallel to the increase in body mass index in children living in Van (r = 0.358, p < .001 and r = 0.235, p < .001, respectively). However, blood pressures were not correlated to body mass index in children living in Izmir. A difference of 1700 m in altitude was associated with higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels in children with similar demographic characteristics, and at this altitude, body mass index and blood pressure showed a positive correlation. Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 2003 /pmc/articles/PMC2582720/ /pubmed/15482651 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Arslan, Sükrü
Arslan, Nur
Soylu, Alper
Akgün, Cihangir
Tepebasili, Ibrahim
Türkmen, Mehmet
Kavukçu, Salih
High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title_full High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title_fullStr High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title_full_unstemmed High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title_short High altitude and blood pressure in children.
title_sort high altitude and blood pressure in children.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2582720/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15482651
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