Author:
Takase Masato,Nakaya Naoki,Tanno Kozo,Kogure Mana,Hatanaka Rieko,Nakaya Kumi,Chiba Ippei,Kanno Ikumi,Nochioka Kotaro,Tsuchiya Naho,Nakamura Tomohiro,Hirata Takumi,Obara Taku,Ishikuro Mami,Kotozaki Yuka,Uruno Akira,Kobayashi Tomoko,Kodama Eiichi N.,Hamanaka Yohei,Orui Masatsugu,Ogishima Soichi,Nagaie Satoshi,Ohmomo Hideki,Fuse Nobuo,Sugawara Junichi,Shimizu Atsushi,Izumi Yoko,Kuriyama Shinichi,Hozawa Atsushi,
Abstract
AbstractRisk factors for hypertension have been emphasized in the Japanese Society of Hypertension Guidelines for the Management of Hypertension. However, large-scale studies on the association of smoking, potassium excretion, and gamma-glutamyl transferase level with BP in the Japanese population are limited. We conducted a cross-sectional study to examine the association between hypertension risk factors and systolic blood pressure in the Tohoku Medical Megabank Community-based Cohort Study (23,446 men and 38,921 women aged ≥20 years). A model adjusted for age, body mass index, smoking status, drinking status, estimated daily salt intake, potassium excretion, (or urinary sodium-to-potassium ratio), gamma-glutamyl transferase, physical activity, education level, status of damage to homes during the Great East Japan Earthquake, and residential areas was used. The average age and systolic blood pressure were 62.5 (10.3) years for men and 59.6 (11.3) years for women, 128.9 (16.7) mmHg for men and 124.7 (17.5) mmHg for women, respectively. Body mass index estimated daily salt intake, urinary sodium-to-potassium ratio and gamma-glutamyl transferase levels were positively associated with systolic blood pressure. Compared with never-drinkers, current drinkers who consumed 23–45 g/day and ≥46.0 g/day had significantly increased systolic blood pressure. Conversely, current smokers (1-10 cigarettes/day and 11-20 cigarettes/day) were inversely associated with systolic blood pressure compared to never-smokers. Overall, systolic blood pressure was associated with gamma-glutamyl transferase and hypertension risk factors, including body mass index, alcohol consumption, estimated daily salt intake, urinary sodium-to-potassium ratio, and potassium excretion. Our findings support the notion that lifestyle modifications should be attempted to prevent hypertension.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
3 articles.
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