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Self-perpetuating effects of birth size on blood pressure levels in elderly people

Self-perpetuating effects of birth size on blood pressure levels in elderly people
Self-perpetuating effects of birth size on blood pressure levels in elderly people
It has been suggested that essential hypertension is determined by 2 separate mechanisms: a growth-promoting process in childhood and a self-perpetuating mechanism in adult life. We report a clinical study of 500 people taken from a cohort of 7086 men and women who were born in Helsinki from 1924 to 1933, and whose body size at birth was recorded. As expected, blood pressure levels were inversely related to birthweight and birth length. These associations, however, were confined to the 213 people who had previously been diagnosed as having hypertension. In them, a 1-kg increase in birthweight was associated with a 6.4-mm Hg (95% confidence interval, 1.0 to 11.9) decrease in systolic blood pressure recorded at the clinic, and with a 9.3-mm Hg (95% confidence interval, 2.1 to 16.5) decrease recorded by ambulatory measurement. We conclude that pathological processes initiated in utero become self-perpetuating in adult life and lead to hypertension. Among elderly people with established hypertension, these processes have a strong effect on blood pressure levels, because they are processes that do not respond well to treatment.
birthweight, blood pressure, nephron numbers, amplification
0194-911X
446-450
Ylihärsilä, Hilkka
42504362-ed30-4a9f-aa44-40027c901a01
Eriksson, Johan G.
eb96b1c5-af07-4a52-8a73-7541451d32cd
Forsén, Tom
71e12224-d830-4202-9b7c-ee8fe47a4d54
Kajantie, Ereo
961516c9-dc68-4c0e-92a1-b8f39af0f2f3
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Barker, David J.P.
5c773838-b094-4ac1-999b-b5869717f243
Ylihärsilä, Hilkka
42504362-ed30-4a9f-aa44-40027c901a01
Eriksson, Johan G.
eb96b1c5-af07-4a52-8a73-7541451d32cd
Forsén, Tom
71e12224-d830-4202-9b7c-ee8fe47a4d54
Kajantie, Ereo
961516c9-dc68-4c0e-92a1-b8f39af0f2f3
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Barker, David J.P.
5c773838-b094-4ac1-999b-b5869717f243

Ylihärsilä, Hilkka, Eriksson, Johan G., Forsén, Tom, Kajantie, Ereo, Osmond, Clive and Barker, David J.P. (2003) Self-perpetuating effects of birth size on blood pressure levels in elderly people. Hypertension, 41 (3), 446-450. (doi:10.1161/01.HYP.0000055780.21222.96).

Record type: Article

Abstract

It has been suggested that essential hypertension is determined by 2 separate mechanisms: a growth-promoting process in childhood and a self-perpetuating mechanism in adult life. We report a clinical study of 500 people taken from a cohort of 7086 men and women who were born in Helsinki from 1924 to 1933, and whose body size at birth was recorded. As expected, blood pressure levels were inversely related to birthweight and birth length. These associations, however, were confined to the 213 people who had previously been diagnosed as having hypertension. In them, a 1-kg increase in birthweight was associated with a 6.4-mm Hg (95% confidence interval, 1.0 to 11.9) decrease in systolic blood pressure recorded at the clinic, and with a 9.3-mm Hg (95% confidence interval, 2.1 to 16.5) decrease recorded by ambulatory measurement. We conclude that pathological processes initiated in utero become self-perpetuating in adult life and lead to hypertension. Among elderly people with established hypertension, these processes have a strong effect on blood pressure levels, because they are processes that do not respond well to treatment.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Keywords: birthweight, blood pressure, nephron numbers, amplification

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 26145
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/26145
ISSN: 0194-911X
PURE UUID: 8effc5ad-84c3-4818-b1f6-0effd772dd96
ORCID for Clive Osmond: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9054-4655

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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:50

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Contributors

Author: Hilkka Ylihärsilä
Author: Johan G. Eriksson
Author: Tom Forsén
Author: Ereo Kajantie
Author: Clive Osmond ORCID iD
Author: David J.P. Barker

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