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Researchers
from the U.S. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute have recently revealed
that the number of Americans treated for high blood pressure has dramatically
increased, which is mainly due to obesity.
Published in the November issue of Hypertension, the study processed data gathered on 30,781 people who had taken part in two National
Health and Nutrition Examination surveys, that spread from 1988 to 1994 and
from 1999 to 2004, respectively.
Results showed that between the two surveys, the number of
hypertension patients had increased from 50.3 percent to 55.5 percent, while
the percentage of people suffering from the condition called prehypertension
(meaning that they are prone to develop high blood pressure) had gone up from 32.3
to 36.1.
The average age at which blood pressure started to increase was
reported to be 60 for men and 40 for women.
The study also found that both the number of people who were
aware of their condition and the number of people who had their blood pressure
under control had risen since the first National Health and Nutrition
Examination survey, especially among black men and women.
Consequently, control rates have been reported to had gone
up from 17% to 30% where black men were concerned and an increase in awareness
of the disease by 5% was registered, black women accounting for the rise.
Lead researcher Paul Sorlie, chief of the Epidemiology
Branch in the above-mentioned institute's Division of Prevention and Population
Sciences, has stated that the main prevention method for hypertension was first
preventing another condition, namely obesity, which is affecting more and more
Americans by the day.
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