scholarly journals High prevalence of undiagnosed hypertension among men in North Central Nigeria: Results from the Healthy Beginning Initiative

PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (11) ◽  
pp. e0242870
Author(s):  
Bolanle Feyisayo Banigbe ◽  
Ijeoma Uchenna Itanyi ◽  
Elizabeth Odilile Ofili ◽  
Amaka Grace Ogidi ◽  
Dina Patel ◽  
...  

Background The prevalence of hypertension in Nigeria is high and growing. The burden and risk factor distribution also vary by geographical zone. Information about prevalence, risk factors and disease status awareness are needed to guide evidence based public health response at the national and sub- national levels. Purpose This paper describes the prevalence of hypertension and its correlates, as well as hypertension status awareness among men in North Central, Nigeria. Methods A cross sectional survey was administered to male partners of pregnant women participating in the Healthy Beginning Initiative program from 2016–2018. Information on socio-demographic characteristics, risk factors, physical measurement and blood pressure readings were collected using a standardized protocol. Data was analyzed with simple and multiple logistic regression. Results The 6,538 men had a median age of 31 years [IQR: 26–37]. The prevalence of hypertension was 23.3% (95% CI: 22.3%-24.4%), while 46.7% had prehypertension. The odds of hypertension was associated with increasing age (OR:1.02, CI:1.01–1.03), being overweight (aOR:1.5,CI:1.3–1.8), being obese (aOR:2.6,CI:2.0–3.3), living in an urban area (aOR:1.6,CI:1.2–2.1), and alcohol use in the 30 days prior (aOR:1.2,CI:1.1–1.4). Overall, 4.5% (297/6,528) of participants had ever been told they have hypertension. Among the 23.3% (1,527/6,528) with hypertension, 7.1% (109/1,527) were aware of their disease status. Men aged 41–50 years (aOR: 1.8, CI: 1.0–3.3), and > 50 years (aOR: 2.2, CI: 1.1–4.3), had higher odds disease status awareness. Living in an urban area was associated with lower odds (aOR: 0.2, CI: 0.03–0.7) of hypertension status awareness. Conclusion This study showed that hypertension is already a significant public health burden in this population and that disease awareness level is very low. Alcohol use and obesity were associated with hypertension, highlighting some modifiable cardiovascular disease risk factors that are prevalent in the study population. Taken together, these findings can inform the design of interventions for primary and secondary cardiovascular disease prevention in Nigeria and similar settings.

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Flook ◽  
C. Jackson ◽  
E. Vasileiou ◽  
C. R. Simpson ◽  
M. D. Muckian ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) has challenged public health agencies globally. In order to effectively target government responses, it is critical to identify the individuals most at risk of coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), developing severe clinical signs, and mortality. We undertook a systematic review of the literature to present the current status of scientific knowledge in these areas and describe the need for unified global approaches, moving forwards, as well as lessons learnt for future pandemics. Methods Medline, Embase and Global Health were searched to the end of April 2020, as well as the Web of Science. Search terms were specific to the SARS-CoV-2 virus and COVID-19. Comparative studies of risk factors from any setting, population group and in any language were included. Titles, abstracts and full texts were screened by two reviewers and extracted in duplicate into a standardised form. Data were extracted on risk factors for COVID-19 disease, severe disease, or death and were narratively and descriptively synthesised. Results One thousand two hundred and thirty-eight papers were identified post-deduplication. Thirty-three met our inclusion criteria, of which 26 were from China. Six assessed the risk of contracting the disease, 20 the risk of having severe disease and ten the risk of dying. Age, gender and co-morbidities were commonly assessed as risk factors. The weight of evidence showed increasing age to be associated with severe disease and mortality, and general comorbidities with mortality. Only seven studies presented multivariable analyses and power was generally limited. A wide range of definitions were used for disease severity. Conclusions The volume of literature generated in the short time since the appearance of SARS-CoV-2 has been considerable. Many studies have sought to document the risk factors for COVID-19 disease, disease severity and mortality; age was the only risk factor based on robust studies and with a consistent body of evidence. Mechanistic studies are required to understand why age is such an important risk factor. At the start of pandemics, large, standardised, studies that use multivariable analyses are urgently needed so that the populations most at risk can be rapidly protected. Registration This review was registered on PROSPERO as CRD42020177714.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel B. Rosoff ◽  
George Davey Smith ◽  
Nehal Mehta ◽  
Toni-Kim Clarke ◽  
Falk W. Lohoff

ABSTRACTAlcohol and tobacco use, two major modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD), are often consumed together. Using large publicly available genome-wide association studies (results from > 940,000 participants), we conducted two-sample multivariable Mendelian randomization (MR) to simultaneously assess the independent effects of alcohol and tobacco use on CVD risk factors and events. We found genetic instruments associated with increased alcohol use, controlling for tobacco use, associated with increased high-density-lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C), decreased triglycerides, but not with coronary heart disease (CHD), myocardial infarction (MI), nor stroke; and instruments for increased tobacco use, controlling for alcohol use, associated with decreased HDL-C, increased triglycerides, and increased risk of CHD and MI. Exploratory analysis found associations with HDL-C, LDL-C, and intermediate-density-lipoprotein metabolites. Consistency of results across complementary methods accommodating different MR assumptions strengthened causal inference, providing strong genetic evidence for the causal effects of modifiable lifestyle risk factors on CVD risk.


Author(s):  
Sarah Bronwen Horton

The only survey of migrant farmworkers’ health in California that used clinical exams to collect data found this occupational group had “startlingly” high rates of hypertension and risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Drawing upon the narratives of two migrant farmworking women who were both hospitalized for hypertension, this chapter explores the role of “immigration stress” and “work stress” in producing their chronic disease. While public health researchers have recently pointed to racial minorities’ physiological response to chronic discrimination as an explanation for their higher rates of hypertension, this chapter makes an analogous argument for legal minorities. It suggests that the recent trend towards heightened interior immigration enforcement subjects all noncitizens to forms of “everyday violence,” only increasing their chronic worry and “perseverative stress.” This chapter explores how the stress of being a legal minority gets under migrants’ skin, helping account for migrant farmworkers’ higher rates of chronic morbidity and mortality.


Global Heart ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. e304
Author(s):  
Basil N. Okeahialam ◽  
Chika Ogbonna ◽  
Evelyn K. Chuhwak ◽  
Ikechukwu Isiguzoro ◽  
Hadiza A. Agbo

Circulation ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 131 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon P Durda

Introduction: Macrophages play important roles in atherosclerotic plaque formation and stability. CD163 is a macrophage specific receptor involved in the clearance and endocytosis of hemoglobin-haptoglobin complexes; soluble CD163 (sCD163) may be a useful biomarker to assess macrophage activation. We are not aware of epidemiologic studies of sCD163 levels and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Also it is not known whether common genetic variants are associated with sCD163. Methods: We tested whether sCD163 was associated with carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) and incident clinical events (overall mortality, coronary heart disease [CHD], myocardial infarction [MI], stroke, and congestive heart failure [CHF]) in 4,577 Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) participants (95% white, 5% black; age range 65-100 y). We used linear regression with adjustment for sex, age, race, study site, current smoking, BMI, hypertension status, systolic blood pressure (SBP) and LDL cholesterol to test for association between sCD163 and IMT. We used 2 Cox proportional hazards models for incident events analyses: (1) adjusting for sex, age, race, study site, and current smoking; (2) model 1 plus BMI, hypertension status, SBP, LDL-cholesterol, C-reactive protein (CRP), interleukin-6 (IL6), and fibrinogen. We also performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for sCD163 in 2,769 unrelated CHS white participants, using Hapmap 2 imputed SNPs. Results: sCD163 was positively associated with female sex, white race, age, BMI, SBP, CRP, IL6 and fibrinogen, negatively associated with current smoking status (p&lt0.0001), and not associated with LDL cholesterol or hypertension status. After adjustment for traditional CVD risk factors, sCD163 was positively associated with carotid IMT (p=0.027). In model 1, increased sCD163 levels were associated with overall mortality (p&lt0.0001), incident CHD (p=0.0034), incident stroke (p=0.016), and incident CHF (p&lt0.0001), but not incident MI (p=0.069). None of the model 2 analyses resulted in significant associations (all p&gt0.05). Five variants upstream of chromosome 2q gene MGAT5 (top result rs4954118, p=7.1x10-14) and a single variant (rs314253, p=6.0x10-13) on chromosome 17p between ASGR1 and DLG4 were significantly (p&lt5x10-8) associated with sCD163. The top result near the CD163 gene was for upstream variant rs6488429 (p=8.2x10-5). Conclusions: sCD163 was associated with carotid IMT after accounting for established CVD risk factors. There were associations of sCD163 with mortality and incident clinical CVD, although associations were attenuated after adjustment for other risk factors. Additional studies are needed to evaluate whether results are similar in younger age groups and other populations. The significant results in the GWAS for sCD163 implicate novel molecular pathways that warrant future fine-mapping and functional studies.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert D. Abbott ◽  
Aya Kadota ◽  
Katsuyuki Miura ◽  
Takehito Hayakawa ◽  
Takashi Kadowaki ◽  
...  

Introduction. Hypertension and cigarette smoking are dominant risk factors for cardiovascular disease in Japan while in westernized countries, broader effects encompass obesity, diabetes, and hypercholesterolemia. This paper examines whether different associations also appear important in the manifestation of activities of daily living (ADL) in older Japanese men in Hawaii and Japan.Methods. Measures of ADL (feeding, toileting, dressing, bathing, and walking around the house) were assessed from 1995 to 1999 in 1,893 men in Hawaii and 543 men in Japan. Concomitant risk factors were measured from 1990 to 1993.Results. In Hawaii, diabetes increased the odds of ≥1 ADL impairment nearly 1.5-fold (P=.020). A similar association was absent in Japan. In contrast, the odds of an ADL impairment in Japan was increased more than 5-fold in the presence of stroke (P<.001). The association in Hawaii was significantly weaker (P=.007). In both cohorts, past alcohol use was associated with a greater likelihood of ADL impairment.Conclusion. In this comparison of genetically similar samples, findings suggest that different strengths in risk factor associations with cardiovascular disease in Japan and westernized countries may also include different strengths in associations with impaired ADL.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David K Cundiff ◽  
Chunyi Wu

AbstractBackgroundRegarding diet’s contribution to cardiovascular disease, Ancel Keys, MD proposed his “lipid hypothesis” in the 1950s. Despite USDA Dietary Guidelines endorsing the lipid hypothesis, debate about whether dietary saturated fat and cholesterol cause cardiovascular disease has continued.MethodsUsing Global Burden of Disease (GBD 2017) data on cardiovascular disease deaths/100k/year, ages 15-69 years old in male and female cohorts (CVD) and dietary and other risk factors, we formatted and population weighted data from 195 countries. Each of the resulting 7846 rows of data (cohorts) represented about 1 million people, projected to total about 7.8 billion people in 2020. We correlated CVD with dietary and other risk factors worldwide and in appropriate subsets.FindingsAll foods were expressed in kilocalories/day (KC/d). We summed the KC/d of processed meat, red meat, fish, milk, poultry, eggs, and added (saturated fatty acid, polyunsaturated fatty acid, and trans fatty acid) to create a “fat-soluble vitamins variable” (FSVV) high in vitamins A, D, E, and K2 (menaquinones). Low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c) correlated positively with LSVV worldwide (r=0.780, 95% CI 0.771 to 0.788, p<0.0001, n=7846 cohorts), so we considered LSVV our marker variable to test the lipid hypothesis as well as our fat-soluble vitamin hypothesis. The FSVV correlated negatively with CVD worldwide (r= -0.329, 95% CI -0.349 to -0.309, p<0.0001), and FSVV correlated positively with CVD in high FSVV cohorts (when FSVV≥567.3 KC/d: r=0.523, 95% CI 0.476 to 0.567, p<0.0001, n=974 cohorts). Meat and poultry negatively correlated with CVD worldwide (e.g., red meat mean=50.27 KC/d, r= -0.232, 95% CI -0.253 to -0.211, p<0.0001) and positively with CVD in high FSVV cohorts (e.g., red meat mean=122.2 KC/d, r=0.655, 95% CI 0.618 to 0.690, p<0.0001, n=974 cohorts).InterpretationSince FSVV correlated positively with CVD in high FSVV cohorts (FSVV≥567.3 KC/d, n=974 cohorts), the lipid hypothesis is supported only in GBD cohorts and individuals with high FSVV intake. These data support the fat-soluble vitamins hypothesis because FSVV correlated negatively with CVD worldwide, meaning the more fat-soluble vitamin containing animal foods and fat for gut absorption the less the CVD. In high FSVV countries, reducing meat and poultry intake by at least half would likely reduce CVD significantly. This GBD cohort methodology could supplement prospective observational studies of individuals to be used in developing food policy and education strategies for reducing CVD and improving public health.FundingNoneResearch in contextEvidence before this studyIn the field of nutritional epidemiology, controversies abound. The lipid hypothesis that dietary saturated fat and cholesterol promote cardiovascular diseases has been disputed recently with no scientific consensus on the outcome.Added value of this studyWith worldwide GBD data, we created a fat-soluble vitamins variable (FSVV) with animal foods—the primary source of fat-soluble vitamins—and fatty acids—the vehicle for absorption of vitamins A, D, E, and K. We found a strong positive correlation between LDLc and FSVV worldwide. Consequently, we used FSVV to test both the lipid hypothesis and our fat-soluble vitamin hypothesis. CVD correlated negatively with FSVV worldwide, meaning insufficient fat-soluble vitamin containing animal food and added fatty acid intake associated with increased CVD. In the subset with high FSVV (FSVV≥567.3, n=974 cohorts), CVD positively correlated with FSVV, suggesting that excessive saturated fat and cholesterol containing food and added fatty acids associates with increased CVD.Low poultry and meat intake associated with higher CVD worldwide (i.e., mean processed meat=5.3 KC/d, red meat=50.3 KC/d, poultry=44.3 KC/d). However, in high FSVV countries, high meat and poultry intakes associated with higher CVD (i.e., with FSVV≥567.3 KC/d, mean processed meat=25.0 KC/d, mean red meat=122.2 KC/d, mean poultry=130.0 KC/d, n=974 cohorts). Eggs, fish, and milk products in any amount associated with lower CVD.Implications of all the available evidenceThe data support the fat-soluble vitamin hypothesis worldwide and the lipid hypothesis only in high FSVV cohorts and individuals. These findings are plausible because deficiencies of vitamins A, D, E, and K (fat soluble vitamins) and fatty acids, required for gut absorption, have been documented to lead to cardiovascular adverse effects. These findings are consistent with the lipid hypothesis in individuals within high FSVV intake countries (e.g., Seven Country Study and Framingham Heart Study). In high FSVV countries, such as in the USA and Europe, the data suggest that public health strategies should endeavor to promote reduction of animal foods and added fats, particularly meat and poultry consumption. In developing countries with low FSVV intake, supplemental fat-soluble vitamin intake should be studied. This GBD data-based methodology can enhance understanding of the complex interrelationships of dietary and other risk factors with CVD and other health endpoints.


2009 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 213-216

Dementia is an important public health problem of increasing magnitude. At present, available therapies provide only minor and temporary relief, and attempts to find a cure have so far failed. Epidemiological studies have identified risk factors for dementia, particularly Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia. In principle, these findings provide an opportunity to intervene and prevent the dementia epidemic. Attention to nongenetic risk factors such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, smoking, and obesity may thus not only prevent cardiovascular disease but also dementia, although it is difficult to prove the efficacy of these measures for dementia prevention.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document