Blood Pressures and Electrocardiographic Findings in the South Australian Aborigines

Abstract
Summary: Blood pressures and electrocardiographic findings in the South Australian Aborigines. F. M. Edwards, P. H. Wise, D. W. Thomas, J. B. Murchland and R. J. CraigBlood pressure measurements were recorded in 522 adults and 141 10–19 year‐old full and part blood Aborigines in five communities. The means for systolic and diastolic blood pressures at 40 years were close to those reported for Europeans, although below this age, values tended to be lower, and above 40 years tended to be higher than those reported in the Tecumseh study. Hypertension, as defined by the Princeton criteria, was present in 29%, more often in the men (1.6 to 1.0), and eight subjects satisfied the criteria for hypertensive heart disease (HHD).522 electrocardiograms were recorded on adult subjects at five Aboriginal communities and classified according to categories of the Minnesota code. Of the 210 abnormalities observed, minor T wave inversions and minor S‐T segment depression were the most commonly encountered, and were more frequent in female subjects. Q wave changes typical of myocardial infarction was found in 5% of the tracings and occurred mainly in older men.If hypertension and certain ECG codes are assumed to be “risk factors” for the development of clinical ischaemic heart disease (IHD), the urbanized Aboriginal had a higher prevalence compared with Caucasian subjects of the Busselton study.“Probable” and “suspect” ECG changes of IHD, although mainly in the older subjects, were found to be associated with hyper‐glycaemia, as recognised in Western society. It is postulated that urbanized Aborigines are prone to cardiovascular degenerative disease to a similar or possibly larger extent than Caucasians.