Influence of familial hypertension on blood pressure during adolescence
F. R. Kellogg, A. Marks and M. I. Cohen
The relationships of familial hypertension and height, weight, and blood
pressure (BP) were studied in two adolescent populations. Subjects having
hypertensive first-degree relatives were matched to control subjects
without such a family history. The group with familial hypertension
demonstrated a slightly higher average BP but also had a greater mean body
weight and ponderal index than the control group. After controlling for
weight, male but not female subjects with a family history of hypertension
had a greater prevalence of elevated BP and higher average pressures than
controls. The factors of above-average weight and familial hypertension
appear to interact so as to produce an excessive prevalence of elevated BP.
These trends suggest that teenagers with hypertensive first-degree
relatives constitute a special risk group that should be closely monitored.