Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Study links weight, blood pressure

- STAFF REPORTS

The more overweight you are, the more likely you are to have high blood pressure, according to a study of 1.7 million Chinese men and women conducted by researcher­s at Yale University and in China.

The study participan­ts’ blood pressure was measured from September 2014 to June 2017 as part of the China Patient- Centered Evaluative Assessment of Cardiac Events Million Persons Project, according to a news release. The project enables researcher­s to look at 22,000 subgroups based on age, sex, race and ethnicity, geography, occupation and other characteri­stics, including whether or not they are taking blood pressure medication. The subjects were age 35 to 80.

In looking at those whose blood pressure was not being treated, the researcher­s found that blood pressure increased 0.8 to 1.7 millimeter­s of mercury for every point increase in body mass index, which is a measure of body fat. The average BMI was 24.7 and the average systolic blood pressure ( measured when the heart is beating and not at rest) was 136.5. Stage 1hypertens­ion is defined as a systolic blood pressure reading of 130 to 139, according to the American Heart Associatio­n. BMI of 25 and above is considered overweight for adults and 30 and above is considered obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Atotal of 39.8 percent of American adults, 93.3 million, were considered obese in 2015- 16, and 32 percent of adults — 75 million — have high blood pressure, according to the CDC.

“The enormous size of the dataset — the result of an unpreceden­ted effort in China — allows us to characteri­ze this relationsh­ip between BMI and blood pressure across tens of thousands of subgroups, which simply would not be possible in a smaller study,” said George Linderman, first author and doctoral candidate at Yale, in the release.

One- third of Chinese adults have high blood pressure, the release said, obesity is expected to triple in men, from 4 percent in 2010 to 12.3 percent in 2025, and to double in women, from 5.2 percent to 10.8 percent. Only about 5 percent of Chinese have their blood pressure under control, the release said, according to an earlier Yale- CORE China paper for the Lancet based on data from the same project.

“If trends in overweight and obesity continue in China, the implicatio­n of our study is that hypertensi­on, already a major risk factor, is likely to become even more important,” said Dr. Harlan Krumholz, director of CORE and senior author on the study. “This paper is ringing the bell that the time is now to focus on these risk factors.”

Blood pressure drugs are much more common in the United States than in China, according to a January 2018 study by Yale- CORE China. The researcher­s recommende­d broader use of anti- hypertensi­ve medication­s in China.

The study was published in the Aug. 17 issue of JAMA Network Open.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / Special to San Francisco Chronicle ?? A patient has his blood pressure checked.
Gabrielle Lurie / Special to San Francisco Chronicle A patient has his blood pressure checked.
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