Blood pressure in children has consistently been related to adult blood pressure, with implications for long-term prevention of cardiovascular disease. The epidemic of obesity in children has resulted in corresponding increases in childhood blood pressure. In this paper, the authors develop norms for childhood blood pressure among normal-weight children (body mass index <85th percentile based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines) as a function of age, sex, and height, using data from 49,967 children included in the database of the National High Blood Pressure Education Program Working Group on High Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents (the Pediatric Task Force). The authors considered three types of models for pediatric blood pressure data, including polynomial regression, restricted cubic splines, and quantile regression, with the latter providing the best fit. The sex-specific norms presented here are a nonlinear function of both age and height and are generally slightly lower than previously developed norms based on Pediatric Task Force data including both normal-weight and overweight children.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) has been shown to be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease in adults. However, there are severe limitations in the extent to which the cardiovascular consequences of OSA are being studied in children. To investigate the echocardiographic changes in children with OSA, right and left ventricular (RV, LV) dimensions and LV mass index and geometry were measured in 28 children with OSA and 19 children with primary snoring (PS). The study showed that LV mass index and relative wall thickness were greater in the OSA group compared with those with PS (p = 0.012 and p < 0.0001, respectively). An apnea-hypopnea index of more than 10 per hour was significantly associated with RV dimension above the 95th percentile (odds ratios, 6.7; 95% confidence interval, 1.4-32) and LV mass index above the 95th percentile (odds ratios, 11.2; confidence interval, 1.9-64). Abnormality of LV geometry was present in 15% of children with PS compared with 39% of children with OSA. We conclude that OSA in children is associated with increased LV mass.
Hypertension is associated with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), a risk factor for cardiovascular events. Since cardiovascular events in youth are rare, hypertension has historically been defined by the 95th percentile of the normal blood pressure (BP) distribution in healthy children. The optimal BP percentile associated with LVH in youth is unknown. We aimed to determine the association of systolic BP (SBP) percentile, independent of obesity, on left ventricular mass index (LVMI), and to estimate which SBP percentile best predicts LVH in youth. We evaluated SBP, anthropometrics, and echocardiogram in 303 adolescents (mean age 15.6 years, 63% white, 55% male) classified by SBP as low-risk (L=141, <80th percentile), mid-risk (M=71, 80–<90th percentile), or high-risk (H=91, ≥90th percentile) using the mean of 6 measurements at 2 visits according to the 2017 guidelines. Logistic regression was used to determine the sensitivity and specificity of various SBP percentiles associated with LVH. Results: BP groups did not differ by age or demographics but differed slightly by body mass index. Mean BP, LVMI, and prevalence of LVH increased across groups (BP: L=111/75, M=125/82, and H=133/92 mm Hg; LVMI: L=31.2, M=34.2, and H=34.9 g/m
2.7
; LVH: L=13%, M=21%, H=27%, all
P
<0.03). SBP percentile remained a significant determinant of LVMI after adjusting for covariates. The 90th percentile for SBP resulted in the best balance between sensitivity and specificity for predicting LVH (LVMI≥38.6 g/m
2.7
). Abnormalities in cardiac structure in youth can be found at BP levels below those used to define hypertension.
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