Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-1-2000

Abstract

We have evaluated the relationship between systolic blood pressure (SBP) and age, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, sodium to potassium ratio (Na/K), and tobacco use in an urban African population. We conducted a random, population-based, cross-sectional survey of people 25 years and older in Marondera, Zimbabwe, with over-sampling in older age groups (n = 775), using a method comparable to that used in International Collaborative Study on Hypertension in Blacks (ICSHIB). The age-adjusted prevalences of hypertension in Marondera (SBP ≥140/DBP ≥90/antihypertensive medication) were 30% for women and 21% for men. The average BMI was 26.3 kg/m2 for women and 21.4 kg/m2 for men. The prevalence of hypertension had a steep association with age and in women ranged from 15% (25-34 years) to 63% (55 years and over) and in men from 9% to 47%. No tobacco use in women and greater Na/K ratio in spot urines in men were significantly associated with an increased SBP. In both men and women the levels of hypertension and SBP were strongly positively associated with BMI, although the relationship appeared to plateau in women with a BMI greater than ≥25 kg/m2. At a given BMI, men and women had similar SBPs and prevalences of hypertension. There is a very high prevalence of hypertension among urban Zimbabweans, particularly among women. Under the assumption the studies are comparable, the prevalence of hypertension in Zimbabwean women (41%) and men (26%) after age adjustment to the ICSHIB populations, appeared higher than almost all of the ICSHIB populations, including those with higher average body mass indexes.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Journal of Human Hypertension

First Page

65

Last Page

73

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