Association of abdominal obesity and high blood pressure with left ventricular hypertrophy and geometric remodeling in Chinese children.
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_BA85D6431168
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Association of abdominal obesity and high blood pressure with left ventricular hypertrophy and geometric remodeling in Chinese children.
Journal
Nutrition, metabolism, and cardiovascular diseases
ISSN
1590-3729 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0939-4753
Publication state
Published
Issued date
04/01/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
31
Number
1
Pages
306-313
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article
Publication Status: ppublish
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Many studies have examined the association between overweight or obesity assessed by body mass index and left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) in children or adolescents, but only few studies have assessed the relation with abdominal obesity in children. This study aimed to assess the association of abdominal obesity assessed by waist circumference (WC), high blood pressure (BP) and their joint effect on LVH and left ventricular (LV) geometric remodeling in Chinese children.
Data were from a cross-sectional survey of 1319 Chinese children aged 6-11 years who had undergone cardiac ultrasound. Compared with normal WC, the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for abdominal obesity were 6.78 (95% confidence interval [CI] 3.77-12.16) for LVH, 2.80 (1.55-5.05) for CR, 5.43 (2.84-10.39) for EH, and 20.05 (4.46-90.08) for CH, respectively. Compared with children with both normal WC and normal BP, the adjusted ORs for those with abdominal obesity and normal BP were 6.98 (3.71-13.10) for LVH, 2.87 (1.47-5.60) for CR, 5.52 (2.70-11.26) for EH, and 15.20 (4.51-78.13) for CH. The adjusted ORs for those with abdominal obesity and high BP were 7.12 (3.27-15.50) for LVH, 4.71 (2.04-10.85) for CR, 7.49 (3.23-17.40) for EH, and 8.65 (1.32-56.89) for CH. The ORs for those with high BP and normal WC were not significant for these cardiac outcomes (P > 0.05).
LVH and LV geometric remodeling were associated more strongly with abdominal obesity than with high BP in Chinese children, stressing the need to prevent childhood abdominal obesity for reducing cardiac risk.
Data were from a cross-sectional survey of 1319 Chinese children aged 6-11 years who had undergone cardiac ultrasound. Compared with normal WC, the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for abdominal obesity were 6.78 (95% confidence interval [CI] 3.77-12.16) for LVH, 2.80 (1.55-5.05) for CR, 5.43 (2.84-10.39) for EH, and 20.05 (4.46-90.08) for CH, respectively. Compared with children with both normal WC and normal BP, the adjusted ORs for those with abdominal obesity and normal BP were 6.98 (3.71-13.10) for LVH, 2.87 (1.47-5.60) for CR, 5.52 (2.70-11.26) for EH, and 15.20 (4.51-78.13) for CH. The adjusted ORs for those with abdominal obesity and high BP were 7.12 (3.27-15.50) for LVH, 4.71 (2.04-10.85) for CR, 7.49 (3.23-17.40) for EH, and 8.65 (1.32-56.89) for CH. The ORs for those with high BP and normal WC were not significant for these cardiac outcomes (P > 0.05).
LVH and LV geometric remodeling were associated more strongly with abdominal obesity than with high BP in Chinese children, stressing the need to prevent childhood abdominal obesity for reducing cardiac risk.
Keywords
Abdominal obesity, Childhood, Left ventricular hypertrophy, Left ventricular remodeling, Pediatrics
Pubmed
Create date
02/02/2021 14:37
Last modification date
07/07/2021 5:37