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Obesity, hypertension, and tobacco use associated with left ventricular remodeling and hypertrophy in South African women: Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort

Obesity, hypertension, and tobacco use associated with left ventricular remodeling and hypertrophy in South African women: Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort
Obesity, hypertension, and tobacco use associated with left ventricular remodeling and hypertrophy in South African women: Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort
Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a marker of increased risk in developing future life-threatening cardiovascular disease (CVD), however, it is unclear how CVD risk factors, such as obesity, blood pressure (BP), and tobacco use, are associated with left ventricular (LV) remodeling and LVH in urban African populations. Therefore, we aimed to identify the prevalence of LVH as well as the health factors associated with LV remodeling and LVH, within black South African adult women and their pre-pubescent children.

Methods
Black female adults (n = 123; age: 29–68 years) and their children (n = 64; age: 4–10; 55% female) were recruited from the Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort in Soweto, South Africa. Tobacco and alcohol use, physical activity, presence of diabetes mellitus, heart disease, and medication were self-reported. Height, weight, and blood pressure were measured in triplicate to determine the prevalence of obesity and hypertension respectively. Echocardiography was used to assess LV mass at end-diastole, based on linear measurements, and indexed to body surface area to determine LVH.

Results
Hypertension and obesity prevalences were 35.8% and 59.3% for adults and 45.3% and 6.3% for children. Self-reported tobacco use in adults was 22.8%. LVH prevalence was 35.8% in adults (75% eccentric: 25% concentric), and 6.3% in children. Concentric remodeling was observed in 15.4% of adults, however, concentric remodeling was only found in one child. In adults, obesity [OR: 2.54 (1.07–6.02; p = 0.02)] and hypertension [3.39 (1.08–10.62; p = 0.04)] significantly increased the odds of LVH, specifically eccentric LVH, while concentric LVH was associated with self-reported tobacco use [OR: 4.58 (1.18–17.73; p = 0.03)]. Although no logistic regression was run within children, of the four children LVH, three had elevated blood pressure and the child with normal blood pressure was overweight.

Conclusions
The association between obesity, hypertension, tobacco use, and LVH in adults, and the 6% prevalence of LVH in children, calls for stronger public health efforts to control risk factors and monitor children who are at risk.
Child health, left ventricular hypertrophy, South Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Ventricular remodeling, women's health
1471-2261
Kolkenbeck-Ruh, Andrea
3e7433c8-e1ea-48ac-9243-f299f321daf8
Soepnel, Larske M.
e342b0a4-2e1d-4ae0-b0cf-9f7c274ebad0
Crouch, Simone H.
5664c146-6ab8-4c8f-8925-15b3f86d2a02
Naidoo, Sanushka
9137fc9d-a30a-425f-bc75-93d23cedef4d
Smith, Wayne
307321f6-ddae-428e-ab32-aad7ae718ce1
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Davies, Justine
08ce8fdb-8a66-4812-ab88-af5d4e5e22a3
Ware, Lisa J.
74860e6c-ac74-44ae-bb62-a7a2032852ba
Kolkenbeck-Ruh, Andrea
3e7433c8-e1ea-48ac-9243-f299f321daf8
Soepnel, Larske M.
e342b0a4-2e1d-4ae0-b0cf-9f7c274ebad0
Crouch, Simone H.
5664c146-6ab8-4c8f-8925-15b3f86d2a02
Naidoo, Sanushka
9137fc9d-a30a-425f-bc75-93d23cedef4d
Smith, Wayne
307321f6-ddae-428e-ab32-aad7ae718ce1
Norris, Shane A.
1d346f1b-6d5f-4bca-ac87-7589851b75a4
Davies, Justine
08ce8fdb-8a66-4812-ab88-af5d4e5e22a3
Ware, Lisa J.
74860e6c-ac74-44ae-bb62-a7a2032852ba

Kolkenbeck-Ruh, Andrea, Soepnel, Larske M., Crouch, Simone H., Naidoo, Sanushka, Smith, Wayne, Norris, Shane A., Davies, Justine and Ware, Lisa J. (2022) Obesity, hypertension, and tobacco use associated with left ventricular remodeling and hypertrophy in South African women: Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort. BMC Cardiovascular Disorders, 22, [403]. (doi:10.1186/S12872-022-02837-W).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is a marker of increased risk in developing future life-threatening cardiovascular disease (CVD), however, it is unclear how CVD risk factors, such as obesity, blood pressure (BP), and tobacco use, are associated with left ventricular (LV) remodeling and LVH in urban African populations. Therefore, we aimed to identify the prevalence of LVH as well as the health factors associated with LV remodeling and LVH, within black South African adult women and their pre-pubescent children.

Methods
Black female adults (n = 123; age: 29–68 years) and their children (n = 64; age: 4–10; 55% female) were recruited from the Birth to Twenty Plus Cohort in Soweto, South Africa. Tobacco and alcohol use, physical activity, presence of diabetes mellitus, heart disease, and medication were self-reported. Height, weight, and blood pressure were measured in triplicate to determine the prevalence of obesity and hypertension respectively. Echocardiography was used to assess LV mass at end-diastole, based on linear measurements, and indexed to body surface area to determine LVH.

Results
Hypertension and obesity prevalences were 35.8% and 59.3% for adults and 45.3% and 6.3% for children. Self-reported tobacco use in adults was 22.8%. LVH prevalence was 35.8% in adults (75% eccentric: 25% concentric), and 6.3% in children. Concentric remodeling was observed in 15.4% of adults, however, concentric remodeling was only found in one child. In adults, obesity [OR: 2.54 (1.07–6.02; p = 0.02)] and hypertension [3.39 (1.08–10.62; p = 0.04)] significantly increased the odds of LVH, specifically eccentric LVH, while concentric LVH was associated with self-reported tobacco use [OR: 4.58 (1.18–17.73; p = 0.03)]. Although no logistic regression was run within children, of the four children LVH, three had elevated blood pressure and the child with normal blood pressure was overweight.

Conclusions
The association between obesity, hypertension, tobacco use, and LVH in adults, and the 6% prevalence of LVH in children, calls for stronger public health efforts to control risk factors and monitor children who are at risk.

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More information

Published date: 9 September 2022
Keywords: Child health, left ventricular hypertrophy, South Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Ventricular remodeling, women's health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 504743
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504743
ISSN: 1471-2261
PURE UUID: 4efe4460-d5e3-4f4e-a940-d429d33e65d7
ORCID for Shane A. Norris: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7124-3788

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Date deposited: 18 Sep 2025 16:57
Last modified: 19 Sep 2025 02:02

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Contributors

Author: Andrea Kolkenbeck-Ruh
Author: Larske M. Soepnel
Author: Simone H. Crouch
Author: Sanushka Naidoo
Author: Wayne Smith
Author: Shane A. Norris ORCID iD
Author: Justine Davies
Author: Lisa J. Ware

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