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Adolescent Blood Pressure Variation and Ventricular Mass

Primary Purpose

Cardiovascular Diseases, Heart Diseases, Hypertension

Status
Completed
Phase
Locations
Study Type
Observational
Intervention
Sponsored by
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
About
Eligibility
Locations
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an observational trial for Cardiovascular Diseases

Eligibility Criteria

undefined - 100 Years (Child, Adult, Older Adult)MaleDoes not accept healthy volunteers

No eligibility criteria

Sites / Locations

    Outcomes

    Primary Outcome Measures

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    Full Information

    First Posted
    May 25, 2000
    Last Updated
    February 17, 2016
    Sponsor
    National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
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    1. Study Identification

    Unique Protocol Identification Number
    NCT00005200
    Brief Title
    Adolescent Blood Pressure Variation and Ventricular Mass
    Study Type
    Observational

    2. Study Status

    Record Verification Date
    April 2000
    Overall Recruitment Status
    Completed
    Study Start Date
    July 1987 (undefined)
    Primary Completion Date
    undefined (undefined)
    Study Completion Date
    June 1991 (Actual)

    3. Sponsor/Collaborators

    Name of the Sponsor
    National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)

    4. Oversight

    5. Study Description

    Brief Summary
    To evaluate possible early neurogenic influence in essential hypertension by monitoring heart growth in adolescents over a two year interval.
    Detailed Description
    BACKGROUND: Evidence has accumulated suggesting that essential hypertension begins early in life and is potentially preventable. One possible pathogenetic mechanism implicated is a sympathetic nervous system abnormality which is manifested by increased sympathetic drive to the heart. An elevated sympathetic nervous system tone and decreased vagal inhibition is responsible for the hyperkinetic circulation seen in a significant proportion of persons with borderline essential hypertension. Exaggerated blood pressure and heart rate responses to mental stressors have been documented in normotensive children of hypertensive parents. These changes appear to involve sympathetic over-responding to fight-flight stimuli. Increased blood pressure variability induced by stress might accelerate vascular and other changes leading to essential hypertension. Behavior and environment might chronically elevate sympathetic nervous system tone with damaging cardiovascular consequences. Stressful working conditions, defective anger management and poor interpersonal problem solving skills have been implicated in studies of stress-induced blood pressure increases. These influences may interact with diet and genetic risk to exacerbate pathophysiology. Essential hypertension risk might be reduced by modifying working and living environments and by training young persons at risk to cope with or avoid stressors that elicit defensive over-responding. DESIGN NARRATIVE: This longitudinal study tested two different models of sympathetic nervous system influence on the early pathophysiology of essential hypertension. The first neurogenic model was evaluated by determining whether an excessively variable or reactive blood pressure in year 1 gave rise to excessive heart growth or left ventricular hypertrophy over a two year follow-up. The second neurogenic model was evaluated by determining if higher blood pressure exacerbated by personality, stress, and dietary sodium intake led to increased left ventricular hypertrophy at follow-up. All ninth-graders entering two large Baltimore high schools in year 1 and year 2 of the study were screened to yield the 240 subjects in the cohort. Initial screening included data on blood pressure, height, weight, health habits, personality, medical history, and health care utilization. Baseline exam included data on basal blood pressure, aerobic exercise stress, cognitive stress, interpersonal stress, ambulatory blood pressure, echocardiogram, physical activity, and Type A personality. The parents were also interviewed to assess family blood pressure status, health history, health care utilization and dietary habits including sodium intake. Students were re-examined at twelve and 24 months. The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the "End Date" entered in the Protocol Registration and Results System (PRS) record.

    6. Conditions and Keywords

    Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
    Cardiovascular Diseases, Heart Diseases, Hypertension

    7. Study Design

    10. Eligibility

    Sex
    Male
    Maximum Age & Unit of Time
    100 Years
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers
    No
    Eligibility Criteria
    No eligibility criteria

    12. IPD Sharing Statement

    Citations:
    PubMed Identifier
    2696855
    Citation
    Ewart CK. Psychological effects of resistive weight training: implications for cardiac patients. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 1989 Dec;21(6):683-8. doi: 10.1249/00005768-198912000-00011.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    8169768
    Citation
    Ewart CK, Kolodner KB. Negative affect, gender, and expressive style predict elevated ambulatory blood pressure in adolescents. J Pers Soc Psychol. 1994 Mar;66(3):596-605. doi: 10.1037//0022-3514.66.3.596.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    1502285
    Citation
    Ewart CK, Kolodner KB. Diminished pulse pressure response to psychological stress: early precursor of essential hypertension? Psychosom Med. 1992 Jul-Aug;54(4):436-46. doi: 10.1097/00006842-199207000-00006.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    1958012
    Citation
    Ewart CK. Social action theory for a public health psychology. Am Psychol. 1991 Sep;46(9):931-46. doi: 10.1037//0003-066x.46.9.931.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    1882010
    Citation
    Ewart CK, Kolodner KB. Social competence interview for assessing physiological reactivity in adolescents. Psychosom Med. 1991 May-Jun;53(3):289-304. doi: 10.1097/00006842-199105000-00003.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    1879387
    Citation
    Ewart CK, Taylor CB, Kraemer HC, Agras WS. High blood pressure and marital discord: not being nasty matters more than being nice. Health Psychol. 1991;10(3):155-63. doi: 10.1037//0278-6133.10.3.155.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    2290766
    Citation
    Hanna KJ, Ewart CK, Kwiterovich PO Jr. Child problem solving competence, behavioral adjustment and adherence to lipid-lowering diet. Patient Educ Couns. 1990 Oct;16(2):119-31. doi: 10.1016/0738-3991(90)90086-z.
    Results Reference
    background
    PubMed Identifier
    8416060
    Citation
    Ewart CK, Kolodner KB. Predicting ambulatory blood pressure during school: effectiveness of social and nonsocial reactivity tasks in black and white adolescents. Psychophysiology. 1993 Jan;30(1):30-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8986.1993.tb03202.x.
    Results Reference
    background

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    Adolescent Blood Pressure Variation and Ventricular Mass

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