Tracking of elevated blood pressure values in adolescent athletes at 1-year follow-up
J. L. Tanji
Department of Family Practice, University of California, Davis Medical Center, Sacramento 95817.
Resting blood pressures were measured in 467 adolescents during
preparticipation physical examinations for high school sports. Fifty-seven
of the athletes (12.2%) had significantly elevated blood pressures.
Forty-three (79.6%) of 54 subjects demonstrated significantly and
persistently elevated blood pressures at 1-year follow-up. A family history
of hypertension was positively associated with elevated blood pressures in
46 (80.7%) of 57 subjects compared with controls (23/410 [5.6%]).
Consistent with previous studies, subjects with elevated blood pressures
had a greater body weight (94.5 +/- 25.7 kg) compared with normotensive
subjects (75.2 +/- 14.0 kg). Subjects with elevated blood pressures engaged
in heavy resistance weight training (three times a week or more) more often
(41/57 [71.9%]) than normotensive subjects (65/410 [15.8%]). These data
support the idea that blood pressures measured during routine
preparticipation physical examinations for high school sports are a useful
tool in screening for elevated blood pressure in adolescents.