Association of Liver Transaminase Levels and Long-Term Blood Pressure Variability in Military Young Males: The CHIEF Study

: An inverse relationship of serum liver transaminases and mortality might be due to better blood pressure control in hypertensive patients. Whether it holds true regarding such an association for long-term blood pressure variability (BPV) in those without antihypertensive therapy is unclear. : A po...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2020-08, Vol.17 (17), p.6094
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Pang-Yen, Lin, Yu-Kai, Chen, Kai-Wen, Tsai, Kun-Zhe, Lin, Yen-Po, Takimoto, Eiki, Lin, Gen-Min
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:: An inverse relationship of serum liver transaminases and mortality might be due to better blood pressure control in hypertensive patients. Whether it holds true regarding such an association for long-term blood pressure variability (BPV) in those without antihypertensive therapy is unclear. : A population of 1112 military males without antihypertensive medications, aged 32 years, was collected from a retrospective longitudinal study in Taiwan. Serum liver aspartate and alanine transaminase (AST and ALT) levels were obtained from a 12 h-fast blood sample of each participant. BPV was assessed by standard deviation (SD) and average real variability (ARV) of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP), respectively across 4 visits during the study period (2012-2014, 2014-2015, 2015-2016, and 2016-2018). Multivariable linear regression analysis was utilized to determine the association adjusting for demographics, anthropometric indexes, SBP, DBP, and lipid profiles. : In the unadjusted model, ALT was significantly and positively correlated with SD and ARV (β (standard errors) = 0.36 (0.16) and 0.24 (0.12), respectively), and so was AST (β = 0.19 (0.08) and 0.14 (0.06), respectively). All the associations were insignificant with adjustments. However, ALT was significantly and negatively correlated with SD and ARV (β = -0.35 (0.14) and -0.25 (0.11), respectively) and so was AST (β = -0.14 (0.07) and -0.12 (0.06), respectively) with adjustments. : Our findings suggested that serum liver transaminases were negatively correlated with long-term systolic BPV in young male adults without antihypertensive therapy, and the clinical relevance needs further investigations.
ISSN:1660-4601
1661-7827
1660-4601
DOI:10.3390/ijerph17176094