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© 1998 Oxford University Press
research-article |
Relationship between lung function and blood pressure in Chinese men and women of Beijing and Guangzhou
aCardiovascular Institute and Fu Wai Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences Beijing, PRC
bKaiser Permanente Center for Health Research Portland, OR, USA
cOregon Health Sciences University Portland, OR, USA
dGuangdong Provincial Cardiovascular Institute Guangzhou, PRC
eUnversiry of North Carolina at Chapel Hill NC. USA
fMembers of the Executive Committee Steering the Overall PRC-USA Collaboration
BACKGROUND: Previous studies of western populations have shown an inverse association between lung function and blood pressure.
METHODS: As part of a People's Republic of China-United States cardiopulmonary epidemiology study, we investigated the cross-sectional relationship between lung function and blood pressure in 6757 Chinese men and women, aged 3554, from Beijing and Guangzhou, China. We also evaluated the longitudinal association between lung function and incident hypertension among 4818 initially normotensive subjects followed up between 2 and 4 years later.
RESULTS: In our cross-sectional analyses of baseline data, lung function varied inversely with baseline systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) in all women and in Beijing men. This association held for absolute and height-standardized forced vital capacity (FVC) and one-second forced expiratory volume (FEy1) (correlations: 0.10, .0.18, P < 0.0001), but was weaker after adjustment for age (correlations: 0.02, 0.11). The longitudinal follow-up showed that lower initial lung function levels were associated with a higher incidence of hypertension (SBP
140 mmHg or DBP
90 mmHg or currently using antihypertensive medications), but only among women in Guangzhou. Relative risks for hypertension incidence for those in the two lowest quintiles for FEy1 and FVC, compared to those in the two highest quintiles, ranged from 1.9 to 2.3 for Guangzhou women and from 0.9 to 1.4 for all other gender-city subgroups. Logistic regression analyses adjusting for age, baseline SBP, body mass index, smoking, education, and urban versus rural setting generally confirmed these patterns.
CONCLUSIONS: These results suggest a statistically significant, though weak, inverse relationship between lung function and blood pressure in Chinese men and women. This association is largely attributable to age and is present prospectively only in women.
Keywords Lung function, blood pressure, China
Accepted 21 March 1997