Body mass index is the main risk factor for arterial hypertension in young subjects without major comorbidity

Background Analytical statistics revealed a variety of risk factors for hypertension, but the complex interplay between different factors remains to be determined by more powerful statistical techniques. Methods Analytical as well as new, explorative statistical methods such as natural segmentation...

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Published inEuropean journal of clinical investigation Vol. 33; no. 3; pp. 223 - 230
Main Authors Lukas, Arno, Kumbein, Friedrich, Temml, Christian, Mayer, Bernd, Oberbauer, Rainer
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford, UK Blackwell Science Ltd 01.03.2003
Blackwell
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
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Summary:Background Analytical statistics revealed a variety of risk factors for hypertension, but the complex interplay between different factors remains to be determined by more powerful statistical techniques. Methods Analytical as well as new, explorative statistical methods such as natural segmentation (k‐means) and predictive modelling algorithms (C4·5) were used to classify the interactions of the individual risk factors for arterial hypertension in a large cohort of subjects. Fifty‐five attributes (subject base, sociodemographic, medical history, laboratory data) were obtained from each of the 3547 participants of a community‐based health survey. The study subjects, mean age of 41 years, were free of major comorbidity. Results Twenty‐five percent of the subjects had at least stage 1 hypertension. No clear linear dependency of risk factors with the diagnosis hypertension could be derived by the analytical statistics. In particular, the mutual amplification of different risk factors towards hypertension could not be revealed by these techniques. Explorative analytics however, uncovered body mass index (BMI) as the main single risk factor associated with hypertension. High predictive accuracy was achieved when combinations of certain risk factors including male gender and age were used. Conclusions In summary, the survey of risk factors for hypertension using explorative analytics yielded high increases for the correct prediction of arterial hypertension. In this cohort, BMI was the single strongest parameter associated with arterial hypertension.
Bibliography:istex:BD1AD0B6B21EA744F69A16D5BFEAABE4945D22DD
ArticleID:ECI1139
ark:/67375/WNG-F06XD01L-4
Sources of support: Austrian Health Fonds, grant# 504/IV/39, and the Department of Epidemiology, Vienna, Austria.
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ISSN:0014-2972
1365-2362
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-2362.2003.01139.x