In-school adolescents' weight status and blood pressure profile in South-western Nigeria: urban-rural comparison

Obesity is a risk factor for hypertension. The study observed the relationship between adolescent weight status and blood pressure (BP) and the determinants of the BP pattern in urban and rural areas. This was a cross-sectional study of 1000 randomly selected respondents (500 from urban and 500 from...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC obesity 2018-01, Vol.5 (1), p.2-2, Article 2
Hauptverfasser: Omisore, Akinlolu Gabriel, Omisore, Bridget, Abioye-Kuteyi, Emmanuel Akintunde, Bello, Ibrahim Sebutu, Olowookere, Samuel Anu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Obesity is a risk factor for hypertension. The study observed the relationship between adolescent weight status and blood pressure (BP) and the determinants of the BP pattern in urban and rural areas. This was a cross-sectional study of 1000 randomly selected respondents (500 from urban and 500 from rural areas) who had anthropometry and BP measurements done. The pattern of BP measurements based on the weight status by location was observed. Statistical inferences were drawn via Chi-square and logistic regression. The mean age for all the respondents was 13.73 years ±2.04 (13.63 ± 2.05 for urban and 13.82 ± 2.03 for rural). Systolic and diastolic BP generally increased with increasing respondents' age, with mean pressures higher in urban areas. About 3% were obese, while 7.7% were overweight. The overall prevalence of high BP was 4.1%, with two-thirds coming from urban areas. On logistic regression analysis, the significant variables associated with high BP include being female (AOR 2.067, 95%CI1.007-4.243,  = 0.048), overweight (AOR 5.574, 95%CI 2.501-12.421,  = 0.0001) and obese (AOR 12.437, 95%CI 4.636-33.364, p = 0.0001). High BP was associated with being female, overweight and obesity in both urban and rural areas. Urgent measures are needed to address increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity among adolescents and consequent high blood pressure.
ISSN:2052-9538
2052-9538
DOI:10.1186/s40608-018-0179-3