12 results on '"Tadeusz Nawarycz"'
Search Results
2. Impact of the 2017 American Academy of Pediatrics Guideline on Hypertension Prevalence Compared With the Fourth Report in an International Cohort
- Author
-
Neha Kajale, Tadeusz Nawarycz, Yajun Liang, Mostafa Qorbani, Shashi Chiplonkar, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Anuradha Khadilkar, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, Pierre Traissac, Young Mi Hong, Min Zhao, Gelayol Ardalan, Hae Soon Kim, Veena Ekbote, Vaman Khadilkar, Emerald G. Heiland, Jalila El Ati, Bo Xi, Roya Kelishadi, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, and Liu Yang
- Subjects
Male ,China ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Internationality ,Tunisia ,pediatrics ,Adolescent ,India ,Iran ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Severity of Illness Index ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Hypertension prevalence ,Republic of Korea ,Prevalence ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Societies, Medical ,child ,Anthropometry ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,blood pressure ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Guideline ,Clinical Practice ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Blood pressure ,Hypertension ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Cohort ,Female ,Poland ,business ,Pediatric population - Abstract
In 2017, the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) updated the clinical practice guideline for high blood pressure (BP) in the pediatric population. In this study, we compared the difference in prevalence of elevated and hypertensive BP values defined by the 2017 AAP guideline and the 2004 Fourth Report and estimated the cardiovascular risk associated with the reclassification of BP status defined by the AAP guideline. A total of 47 200 children and adolescents aged 6 to 17 years from 6 countries (China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, and Tunisia) were included in this study. Elevated BP and hypertension were defined according to 2 guidelines. In addition, 1606 children from China, Iran, and Korea who were reclassified upward by the AAP guideline compared with the Fourth Report and for whom laboratory data were available were 1:1 matched with children from the same countries who were normotensive by both guidelines. Compared with the Fourth Report, the prevalence of elevated BP defined by the AAP guideline was lower (14.9% versus 8.6%), whereas the prevalence of stages 1 and 2 hypertension was higher (stage 1, 6.6% versus 14.5%; stage 2, 0.4% versus 1.7%). Additionally, comparison of laboratory data in the case-control study showed that children who were reclassified upward were more likely to have adverse lipid profiles and high fasting blood glucose compared with normotensive children. In conclusion, the prevalence of elevated BP and hypertension varied significantly between both guidelines. Applying the new AAP guideline could identify more children with hypertension who are at increased cardiovascular risk.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. International Waist Circumference Percentile Cutoffs for Central Obesity in Children and Adolescents Aged 6 to 18 Years
- Author
-
Hannelore Neuhauser, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Alison Venn, Young Mi Hong, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Veena Ekbote, Pascal Bovet, Min Zhao, Yoto Yotov, Bee Koon Poh, Sonya Galcheva, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Costan G. Magnussen, Anuradha Khadilkar, Mieczysław Litwin, Anja Schienkiewitz, Bo Xi, Isabelle Herter-Aeberli, Velin Stratev, Aneta Grajda, Lyn M. Steffen, Roya Kelishadi, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Violeta Iotova, Mostafa Qorbani, Zbigniew Kułaga, Vaman Khadilkar, Tadeusz Nawarycz, Terence Dwyer, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Michael D. Schmidt, Gelayol Ardalan, Hae Soon Kim, Xinnan Zong, Agnieszka Różdżyńska-Świątkowska, Abd Talib Ruzita, Anna Świąder-Leśniak, and Ismail Mn
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Pediatric Obesity ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,Waist ,Adolescent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Context (language use) ,Iran ,Overweight ,Biochemistry ,Body Mass Index ,Young Adult ,Sex Factors ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Online Only Articles ,Child ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Malaysia ,Prognosis ,Circumference ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Body Height ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Area Under Curve ,Child, Preschool ,Obesity, Abdominal ,Female ,Poland ,Waist Circumference ,Underweight ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Switzerland ,Follow-Up Studies ,Demography - Abstract
Context No universal waist circumference (WC) percentile cutoffs used have been proposed for screening central obesity in children and adolescents. Objective To develop international WC percentile cutoffs for children and adolescents with normal weight based on data from 8 countries in different global regions and to examine the relation with cardiovascular risk. Design and Setting We used pooled data on WC in 113,453 children and adolescents (males 50.2%) aged 4 to 20 years from 8 countries in different regions (Bulgaria, China, Iran, Korea, Malaysia, Poland, Seychelles, and Switzerland). We calculated WC percentile cutoffs in samples including or excluding children with obesity, overweight, or underweight. WC percentiles were generated using the general additive model for location, scale, and shape (GAMLSS). We also estimated the predictive power of the WC 90th percentile cutoffs to predict cardiovascular risk using receiver operator characteristics curve analysis based on data from 3 countries that had available data (China, Iran, and Korea). We also examined which WC percentiles linked with WC cutoffs for central obesity in adults (at age of 18 years). Main Outcome Measure WC measured based on recommendation by the World Health Organization. Results We validated the performance of the age- and sex-specific 90th percentile WC cutoffs calculated in children and adolescents (6-18 years of age) with normal weight (excluding youth with obesity, overweight, or underweight) by linking the percentile with cardiovascular risk (area under the curve [AUC]: 0.69 for boys; 0.63 for girls). In addition, WC percentile among normal weight children linked relatively well with established WC cutoffs for central obesity in adults (eg, AUC in US adolescents: 0.71 for boys; 0.68 for girls). Conclusion The international WC cutoffs developed in this study could be useful to screen central obesity in children and adolescents aged 6 to 18 years and allow direct comparison of WC distributions between populations and over time.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Body mass index percentiles and elevated blood pressure among children and adolescents
- Author
-
Tadeusz Nawarycz, Young Mi Hong, Shashi Chiplonkar, Xia Liu, Vaman Khadilkar, Roya Kelishadi, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Neha Kajale, Mingming Wang, Pierre Traissac, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, Mostafa Qorbani, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Bo Xi, Jalila El Ati, Min Zhao, Yajun Liang, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Anuradha Khadilkar, Veena Ekbote, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Gelayol Ardalan, Liu Yang, and Hae Soon Kim
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Confidence interval ,World health ,Elevated blood ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Blood pressure ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
It is well established that obesity is associated with an increased risk of elevated and high blood pressure (BP) in children and adolescents. However, it is uncertain whether there is an increase in the risk of elevated and high BP associated with an increase of body mass index (BMI) among children and adolescents whose BMI is in the accepted normal range. Data were available for 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6–17 years from seven national cross-sectional surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. The subjects were divided into eight percentile subgroups according to their BMI levels based on the World Health Organization recommendations. Elevated BP and high BP were defined using the 2016 international child BP criteria. Compared with the reference subgroup of the 5th–24th percentiles, the odds ratios (ORs) for high BP were 1.27 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.14–1.41; P
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Comparative analysis of different diagnostic methods for detecting root canal orifices by a student and an experienced endodontist – initial report
- Author
-
Jerzy Sokołowski, Ewa Domagała, Katarzyna Banaszek, and Tadeusz Nawarycz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Diagnostic methods ,business.industry ,Root canal ,medicine ,Dentistry ,business ,General Dentistry ,Surgery ,Endodontist - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Body mass index percentiles and elevated blood pressure among children and adolescents
- Author
-
Mingming, Wang, Roya, Kelishadi, Anuradha, Khadilkar, Young, Mi Hong, Tadeusz, Nawarycz, Małgorzata, Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Hajer, Aounallah-Skhiri, Mohammad, Esmaeil Motlagh, Hae, Soon Kim, Vaman, Khadilkar, Alicja, Krzyżaniak, Habiba, Ben Romdhane, Ramin, Heshmat, Shashi, Chiplonkar, Barbara, Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Jalila, El Ati, Mostafa, Qorbani, Neha, Kajale, Pierre, Traissac, Lidia, Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Gelayol, Ardalan, Veena, Ekbote, Liu, Yang, Min, Zhao, Xia, Liu, Yajun, Liang, and Bo, Xi
- Subjects
Cross-Sectional Studies ,Adolescent ,Hypertension ,Humans ,Blood Pressure ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Child ,United States ,Body Mass Index - Abstract
It is well established that obesity is associated with an increased risk of elevated and high blood pressure (BP) in children and adolescents. However, it is uncertain whether there is an increase in the risk of elevated and high BP associated with an increase of body mass index (BMI) among children and adolescents whose BMI is in the accepted normal range. Data were available for 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6-17 years from seven national cross-sectional surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. The subjects were divided into eight percentile subgroups according to their BMI levels based on the World Health Organization recommendations. Elevated BP and high BP were defined using the 2016 international child BP criteria. Compared with the reference subgroup of the 5th-24th percentiles, the odds ratios (ORs) for high BP were 1.27 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.14-1.41; P 0.001) in the 25th-49th percentile subgroup, 1.55 (95% CI, 1.39-1.73; P 0.001) in the 50th-74th percentile subgroup, and 2.17 (95% CI, 1.92-2.46; P 0.001) in the 75th-84th percentile subgroup, respectively, after adjustment for sex, age, race/ethnicity, height and country. Additionally, the corresponding ORs for elevated BP were 1.21 (95% CI, 1.10-1.32; P 0.001), 1.55 (95% CI, 1.42-1.69; P 0.001), and 1.80 (95% CI, 1.62-2.01; P 0.001), respectively. In conclusion, a BMI in the 25th-84th percentiles, within the accepted normal weight range, was associated with an increased risk of elevated and high BP among children and adolescents. It is important for children and adolescents to keep a BMI at a low level in order to prevent and control hypertension.
- Published
- 2019
7. The Concept of a Web-Based Calculator for Supporting Waist Circumference Interpretation Among Pediatric Patients
- Author
-
Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Krzysztof Pytel, and Tadeusz Nawarycz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,Waist ,business.industry ,Circumference ,medicine.disease ,law.invention ,Calculator ,law ,Physical therapy ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Abdominal obesity ,Web-based calculator - Abstract
Waist circumference (WC) and WC-based indicators are often used as simple measures of abdominal obesity (AO) and an essential component of the metabolic syndrome (MetS). However, in the case of pediatric subjects, access to current and appropriate reference systems (usually in the form of tables or percentile curve distributions) is often difficult and their interpretation—complicated for the user. The concept of a web-based calculator supporting AO and MetS diagnostics in children and adolescents has been presented. The calculator enables selection of different criteria for the assessment of both MetS and its individual components (AO, blood pressure, lipids, and glucose/insuline). An extensive database of pediatric reference systems allows for quick diagnostics of the child's cardiometabolic profile and may be useful in personal comparative epidemiological studies.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Height-specific blood pressure cutoffs for screening elevated and high blood pressure in children and adolescents : an international study
- Author
-
Yaping Hou, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Pierre Traissac, Mieczysław Litwin, Lavanya Parthasarathy, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Anuradha Khadilkar, Tadeusz Nawarycz, Bo Xi, Shashi Chiplonkar, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Mostafa Qorbani, Roya Kelishadi, Young Mi Hong, Pascal Bovet, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Vaman Khadilkar, Min Zhao, Arnaud Chiolero, Gelayol Ardalan, Hae Soon Kim, Jalila El Ati, Liu Yang, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, and Neha Kajale
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,Adolescent ,Physiology ,Elevated bp ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,elevated blood pressure ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,children ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Epidemiology ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,Table (landform) ,Cutoff ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,adolescents ,Child ,610 Medicine & health ,Reference table ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Area under the curve ,Reproducibility of Results ,methodology ,Body Height ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Blood pressure ,Area Under Curve ,Hypertension ,Female ,epidemiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,360 Social problems & social services ,Demography ,high blood pressure - Abstract
Pediatric blood pressure (BP) reference tables are generally based on sex, age, and height and tend to be cumbersome to use in routine clinical practice. In this study, we aimed to develop a new, height-specific simple BP table according to the international child BP reference table based on sex, age and height and to evaluate its performance using international data. We validated the simple table in a derivation cohort that included 58,899 children and adolescents aged 6-17 years from surveys in 7 countries (China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States) and in a validation cohort that included 70,072 participants from three other surveys (China, Poland and Seychelles). The BP cutoff values for the simple table were calculated for eight height categories for both the 90th ("elevated BP") and 95th ("high BP") percentiles of BP. The simple table had a high performance to predict high BP compared to the reference table, with high values (boys/girls) of area under the curve (0.94/0.91), sensitivity (88.5%/82.9%), specificity (99.3%/99.7%), positive predictive values (93.9%/97.3%), and negative predictive values (98.5%/97.8%) in the pooled data from 10 studies. The simple table performed similarly well for predicting elevated BP. A simple table based on height only predicts elevated BP and high BP in children and adolescents nearly as well as the international table based on sex, age, and height. This has important implications for simplifying the detection of pediatric high BP in clinical practice.
- Published
- 2019
9. The prevalence of abdominal obesity among pupils with visual impairment in Poland
- Author
-
Tadeusz Nawarycz, Magdalena Wrzesińska, Sławomir Motylewski, Lucjan Pawlicki, and Beata Urzędowicz
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,030506 rehabilitation ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Visual impairment ,Vision Disorders ,Logistic regression ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intellectual disability ,medicine ,Odds Ratio ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Disabled Persons ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Students ,Female students ,Abdominal obesity ,Waist-to-height ratio ,Schools ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Body Height ,Disabled Children ,Health promotion ,Logistic Models ,Obesity, Abdominal ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Poland ,medicine.symptom ,Waist Circumference ,0305 other medical science ,business - Abstract
Background Obesity particularly affects young people with disabilities, whose ability to participate in health promotion programs is reduced. Objective The aim of the study is to determine the prevalence of abdominal obesity among students with visual impairment in Poland according to waist-to-height ratio, including indicators such as gender, age or certain additional coexisting disabilities or disorders. Methods A total of 238 students who were blind or partially-sighted, aged 7.35–23.35 years (mean age 15.5; ±3.9 years), were included in the study. Abdominal obesity was estimated using waist-to-height ratio; a cutoff point of ≥0.50 was determined as central obesity. Results Abdominal obesity was identified among 26.9% [N = 64] of the participants: 33.1% [N = 41] of male students and 20.2% [N = 23] of female students (ch2 = 5.02; p = 0.025; Phi = 0.145). Of all the students, the multivariate logistic regression showed that abdominal obesity was one and a half times more likely to be detected in the 7–9 year age group (OR = 1.56; 95% CI 0.58–4.18; P = 0.376) than the 19–23 year age group. However, among the female subjects, abdominal obesity was over six times more common in the 7–9 year group (OR = 6.48; 95% CI 1.29–32.5; P = 0.022) than in the group of early adults. Central obesity was detected almost three times more frequently among students with visual impairment and additional intellectual disability (OR = 2.99; 95% CI 0.52–17.1; P = 0.215) than those with only visual impairment. Conclusion Prevention programs aimed at reducing abdominal obesity among pupils with visual impairment from special schools are needed.
- Published
- 2016
10. Performance of Eleven Simplified Methods for the Identification of Elevated Blood Pressure in Children and Adolescents
- Author
-
Neha Kajale, Mostafa Qorbani, Shashi Chiplonkar, Bo Xi, Jalila El Ati, Tadeusz Nawarycz, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, Pierre Traissac, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Lavanya Parthasarathy, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Anuradha Khadilkar, Min Zhao, Chuanwei Ma, Roya Kelishadi, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Young Mi Hong, Pascal Bovet, Gelayol Ardalan, Hae Soon Kim, Vaman Khadilkar, and Xinnan Zong
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percentile ,hypertension ,Adolescent ,Databases, Factual ,Elevated bp ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Risk Assessment ,Elevated blood ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,children ,030225 pediatrics ,Epidemiology ,Task Performance and Analysis ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Mass Screening ,adolescents ,Child ,Monitoring, Physiologic ,Simplified methods ,Receiver operating characteristic ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,Age Factors ,Child Health ,methodology ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Predictive value ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Hypertension ,epidemiology ,Female ,business ,high blood pressure ,Demography - Abstract
The identification of elevated blood pressure (BP) in children and adolescents relies on complex percentile tables. The present study compares the performance of 11 simplified methods for assessing elevated or high BP in children and adolescents using individual-level data from 7 countries. Data on BP were available for a total of 58 899 children and adolescents aged 6 to 17 years from 7 national surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. Performance of the simplified methods for screening elevated or high BP was assessed with receiver operating characteristic curve (area under the curve), sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. When pooling individual data from the 7 countries, all 11 simplified methods performed well in screening high BP, with high area under the curve values (0.84–0.98), high sensitivity (0.69–1.00), high specificity (0.87–1.00), and high negative predictive values (≥0.98). However, positive predictive value was low for most simplified methods, but reached ≈0.90 for each of the 3 methods, including sex- and age-specific BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), the formula for BP references (at the 95th percentile of height), and the simplified method relying on a child’s absolute height. These findings were found independently of sex, age, and geographical location. Similar results were found for simplified methods for screening elevated BP. In conclusion, all 11 simplified methods performed well for identifying high or elevated BP in children and adolescents, but 3 methods performed best and may be most useful for screening purposes.
- Published
- 2016
11. Anthropometric Predictors and Artificial Neural Networks in the diagnosis of Hypertension
- Author
-
Tadeusz Nawarycz, Wojciech Drygas, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, and Krzysztof Pytel
- Subjects
Artificial neural network ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Anthropometry ,equipment and supplies ,computer.software_genre ,Machine learning ,Field (computer science) ,body regions ,Health problems ,Data mining ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer - Abstract
Artificial Neural Networks (ANNs) play a vital role in the medical field in solving various health problems like estimating the risk of cardiovascular diseases. The article concerns the process of developing ANNs for estimating the risk of arterial hypertension. ANNs proposed in this article use anthropometrical predictors, easy to control for everybody at home without special equipment. In the article we analyze four different models of ANNs and try to find out which model and set of anthropometrical predictors estimates the risk the most accurately. We use dataset of 2485 real cases of patients from the city of Lodz. The experiment was done in the Matlab environment. The performance of the proposed method in terms of accuracy and facility of use shows that ANNs can be effective tools for preliminary tests of arterial hypertension.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Establishing International Blood Pressure References Among Nonoverweight Children and Adolescents Aged 6 to 17 Years
- Author
-
Bee Koon Poh, Young Mi Hong, Pascal Bovet, Sonya Galcheva, Bo Xi, Mostafa Qorbani, Hajer Aounallah-Skhiri, P. Schwandt, Alicja Krzyżaniak, Gelayol Ardalan, Anuradha Khadilkar, Hae Soon Kim, Tadeusz Nawarycz, Rita Y. T. Sung, Mohammad Esmaeil Motlagh, Arnaud Chiolero, Pierre Traissac, Neha Kajale, Tao Zhang, Mieczysław Litwin, Jalila El Ati, Roya Kelishadi, Lidia Ostrowska-Nawarycz, Ramin Heshmat, Shashi Chiplonkar, Hung K. So, Haiyan Pan, Vaman Khadilkar, Min Zhao, Barbara Stawińska-Witoszyńska, Habiba Ben Romdhane, Lyn M. Steffen, Gerda Maria Haas, Lachezar Marinov, Xinnan Zong, Hannelore Neuhauser, Małgorzata Krzywińska-Wiewiorowska, and Lavanya Parthasarathy
- Subjects
Male ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Internationality ,Adolescent ,Cross-sectional study ,Body height ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Body weight ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Reference Values ,030225 pediatrics ,Physiology (medical) ,Medicine ,Humans ,Child ,child ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,blood pressure ,glob (programming) ,Blood Pressure Determination ,Body Height ,Blood pressure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,adolescent ,Reference values ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Background— Several distributions of country-specific blood pressure (BP) percentiles by sex, age, and height for children and adolescents have been established worldwide. However, there are no globally unified BP references for defining elevated BP in children and adolescents, which limits international comparisons of the prevalence of pediatric elevated BP. We aimed to establish international BP references for children and adolescents by using 7 nationally representative data sets (China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States). Methods and Results— Data on BP for 52 636 nonoverweight children and adolescents aged 6 to 19 years were obtained from 7 large nationally representative cross-sectional surveys in China, India, Iran, Korea, Poland, Tunisia, and the United States. BP values were obtained with certified mercury sphygmomanometers in all 7 countries by using standard procedures for BP measurement. Smoothed BP percentiles (50th, 90th, 95th, and 99th) by age and height were estimated by using the Generalized Additive Model for Location Scale and Shape model. BP values were similar between males and females until the age of 13 years and were higher in males than females thereafter. In comparison with the BP levels of the 90th and 95th percentiles of the US Fourth Report at median height, systolic BP of the corresponding percentiles of these international references was lower, whereas diastolic BP was similar. Conclusions— These international BP references will be a useful tool for international comparison of the prevalence of elevated BP in children and adolescents and may help to identify hypertensive youths in diverse populations.
- Published
- 2015
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.