Ethnicity, pressor reactivity, and children's blood pressure. Five years of observations.
- 1 September 1992
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 20 (3) , 327-332
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.20.3.327
Abstract
During the 5 years of this investigation, resting blood pressure and pressor reactivity were measured in 292 white children and 46 black children in 1987, 1988, 1989, and 1991. In 1987, all children were in the third grade; in 1991, the children were in the seventh grade. Reactivity was assessed with a standardized psychological stressor, a television video game. Children displayed significant stability of absolute blood pressure and heart rate reactivity between grades 3 and 7. At all examinations, black children demonstrated blood pressure reactivity that was significantly greater in magnitude (both absolute level and change from resting measurements) than that of white children. Black children exhibited significantly greater heart rate reactivity only when defined as change from the resting measurements; absolute levels of heart rate reactivity were comparable for blacks and whites. For black children, blood pressure reactivity in 1987 was the strongest predictor of resting blood pressure (both systolic and diastolic) in 1991. Among white children, resting blood pressure was the strongest predictor of future resting blood pressure. Further research is needed to determine if ethnic differences in children's pressor reactivity are associated with ethnic differences in the prevalence of hypertension.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Prognostic significance of exercise versus resting blood pressure in hypertensive men.Hypertension, 1991
- Differences in blacks and whites with essential hypertension: biochemistry and endocrine. State of the art lecture.Hypertension, 1990
- Left ventricular mass and exercise responses predict future blood pressure. The Muscatine Study.Hypertension, 1988
- The epidemiology of resting heart rate in a national sample of men and women: Associations with hypertension, coronary heart disease, blood pressure, and other cardiovascular risk factorsAmerican Heart Journal, 1988
- Race and cardiovascular reactivity. A replication.Hypertension, 1988
- The association between cardiovascular response tasks and future blood pressure levels in children: Bogalusa heart studyAmerican Heart Journal, 1987
- Socioeconomic status, ethnic origin, and risk factors for coronary heart disease in childrenAmerican Heart Journal, 1987
- Blood pressure response to dynamic exercise in healthy children—black vs whiteThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1981
- Racial contrasts in cardiovascular response tests for children from a total community.Hypertension, 1980
- Tracking of blood lipids and blood pressures in school age children: the Muscatine study.Circulation, 1978