Testing It Up

National HIV Testing Day on June 27 »« AMA Recommends Start of Breast Cancer Screening at 40

More Kids, Teens Suffer from High Blood Pressure

When one talks about high blood pressure, more often than not, thoughts turn to the belief that it is a condition that affects old people. A new study, published online in the journal online in the journal Hypertension, observed a steep increase in the number of young people sent to the hospital for high blood pressure.

The study found that hospital stays for Americans aged 18 and below due to high blood pressure nearly doubled over a ten-year period – from 12,661 in 1997 to 24,602 in 2006. The researchers pointed out further that high blood pressure among kids is becoming more common, with the condition affecting up to 3% of children in America.

Joshua Samuels, MD, of the University of Texas, who wrote an editorial published along with the study, shared: “significant increases in blood pressure are likely riding the wave of pediatric obesity that is spreading across America.”

Suzanne Steinbaum, DO, a preventive cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, on the other hand, shared: “This could be a huge wake-up call. When I read an article like this, I feel like standing on the buildings in New York City and screaming. Children are getting sicker and sicker as they’re getting more obese. There’s going to be a huge increase in heart disease and health care costs because of this… Children who have hypertension usually become adults with hypertension. And children who are obese usually become obese adults, with all the chronic conditions associated with that.”

Tags: childhood hypertension, childhood obesity, high blood pressure in kids, high blood pressure in teens, hypertension in kids, hypertension in teens, pediatric hypertension, pediatric obesity
June 22, 2012 at 4:23 am
2 comments »
  • June 26, 2012 at 11:33 amAnne

    I think it is more than just obesity. I think it is also sedentary lifestyles, an opinion backed by a research study described over at Belleruth Naparstek’s site (http://www.belleruthnaparstek.com/hot-research/no-surprise-here-sedentary-young-people-have-elevated-blood-pressure.html). According to the study from the Research Centre in Physical Activity, Health & Leisure, level of activity is a key factor in teen cases of high blood pressure.

  • May 2, 2013 at 3:57 pmcarnavalcampirano.com

    Good site. My thanks for writing that. I’ll come to this site to see what’s new and recommend my friends about your posting.

Leave a Reply or trackback