Affiliation:
1. From the Integrative Anthropological Sciences Program (M.G., A.D.B.), University of California-Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA; Departamento de Medicina (D.E.R.), Universidad Mayor de San Simón, Cochabamba, Bolivia; Department of Anthropology (J.S., H.K.), University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.
Abstract
The rise in blood pressure with age is a major risk factor for cardiovascular and renal disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Age-related increases in blood pressure have been observed in almost every population, except among hunter-gatherers, farmers, and pastoralists. Here we tested for age-related increases in blood pressure among Tsimane forager-farmers. We also test whether lifestyle changes associated with modernization lead to higher blood pressure and a greater rate of age-related increase in blood pressure. We measured blood pressure longitudinally on 2248 adults age ≥20 years (n=6468 observations over 8 years). Prevalence of hypertension was 3.9% for women and 5.2% for men, although diagnosis of persistent hypertension based on multiple observations reduced prevalence to 2.9% for both sexes. Mixed-effects models revealed systolic, diastolic, and pulse blood pressure increases of 2.86 (
P
<0.001), 0.95 (
P
<0.001), and 1.95 mmHg (
P
<0.001) per decade for women and 0.91 (
P
<0.001), 0.93 (
P
<0.001), and −0.02 mmHg (
P
=0.93) for men, substantially lower than rates found elsewhere. Lifestyle factors, such as smoking and Spanish fluency, had minimal effect on mean blood pressure and no effect on age-related increases in blood pressure. Greater town proximity was associated with a lower age-related increase in pulse pressure. Effects of modernization were, therefore, deemed minimal among Tsimane, in light of their lean physique, active lifestyle, and protective diet.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
151 articles.
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