Association between growth patterns and blood pressure in children and adolescents with different nutritional status:cross sectional data / 中国学校卫生
Chinese Journal of School Health
; (12): 1068-1072, 2021.
Article
em Zh
| WPRIM
| ID: wpr-886327
Biblioteca responsável:
WPRO
ABSTRACT
Objective@#To explore the association between growth patterns and blood pressure in children and adolescents with different nutritional status.@*Methods@#A total of 38 839 children and adolescents aged 6 to 8 years old were included in this study by stratified cluster sampling. The American Academy of Pediatrics 2017 Guideline was used to evaluate the blood pressure, the US 2000 CDC standard was used to determine different growth patterns, and the WHO Child and Adolescent Growth and Development Standard issued in 2007 was used to evaluate nutritional status. Variance analyses were used to compare the levels of systolic and diastolic blood pressure and growth patterns by nutritional status, and χ 2 test was used to compare the difference of prevalence. Multivariate Logistic regression model was used to analyze the association between growth patterns and blood pressure.@*Results@#The proportion of normal growth, catch up growth and catch down growth was 33.2%, 41.6% and 25.2%, respectively. Under different growth patterns, systolic blood pressure (105.17±12.33) mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure (66.55±8.75) mm Hg of catch up growth were higher than those of normal growth and catch down growth. In overweight and obesity, the prevalence of hypertension (24.9%), high systolic blood pressure (18.9%) and high diastolic blood pressure (15.0%) in catch up growth were higher than those in normal growth and catch down growth ( P <0.05). The risk of catch up growth to hypertension was higher in overweight and obesity ( OR =1.18, 95% CI =1.06-1.31) than in normal children and adolescents ( OR =1.15, 95% CI =1.05-1.27).@*Conclusion@#In catch up growth children and adolescents, hypertension and high blood pressure are higher than normal growth and catch down growth. Overweight and obesity than normal children and adolescents have a higher risk of hypertension.
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Índice:
WPRIM
Tipo de estudo:
Prevalence_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Idioma:
Zh
Revista:
Chinese Journal of School Health
Ano de publicação:
2021
Tipo de documento:
Article