医学
百分位
内膜中层厚度
队列
超重
体质指数
人口
血压
肥胖
内科学
置信区间
人口学
心脏病学
作者
Hannelore Neuhauser,Julia Büschges,Angelika Schaffrath Rosario,Anja Schienkiewitz,Giselle Sarganas,Karsten Königstein,Dieter Schweizer,Arno Schmidt-Trucksäss
出处
期刊:Hypertension
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2022-03-08
标识
DOI:10.1161/hypertensionaha.121.18521
摘要
Background: This study aimed to derive carotid intima media thickness (CIMT) percentiles from a population-based sample of adolescents and young adults using improved technology, standardization and quality control, and to investigate the association of CIMT with hypertensive blood pressure (BP) and obesity. Methods: Four thousand seven hundred nine 14- to 28-year-old participants of the German KiGGS cohort 11-year follow-up, which was based on a nationwide population sample, had B-mode ultrasound CIMT measurement with semi-automated edge-detection and automatic ECG-gated real-time quality control. CIMT percentiles were estimated from far wall CIMT during 2 to 6 heart cycles using the GAMLSS statistical model. Hypertensive BP, overweight, obesity, and a risk score from added Z scores of triglycerides, total/HDL (high-density lipoprotein)-cholesterol ratio, and HbA1c were based on standardized measurements at baseline and follow-up. Results: CIMT differed by sex at all ages, furthermore by age and height in a nonlinear fashion. Percentiles were estimated simultaneously by age and height. Hypertensive BP and obesity were associated cross-sectionally and longitudinally with a higher risk of CIMT ≥75th percentile in log-binomial regression models adjusted for age, sex, height, current smoking, and cardiovascular risk score. For CIMT ≥90th percentile, the relative risk effect estimates were consistently >1 but often had large confidence intervals including 1, largest adjusted relative risk 3.37 (95% CI, 1.41–8.04) for the combination of hypertensive BP and obesity at follow-up. Conclusions: Based on state-of-the-art measurements and statistical techniques, these population-based CIMT percentiles by sex, age and height add unbiased evidence for the association of subclinical atherosclerosis with hypertensive BP and obesity in the young.
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