Representative rural and urban populations in Jamaica were defined geographically, enumerated by private census, and visited at home by two physicians who carried out indirect arterial blood-pressure measurements. These readings have been related to a number of personal and environmental factors, and this analysis shows the following facts. 1. There was a considerable difference in the prevalence of hypertension, particularly among women, between neighbouring rural and urban negro populations, with a higher prevalence in the women from the rural area. This was not attributable to differences in survey technique, weight, or pulse rate, nor to differences in the prevalence of hypertension secondary to renal disease as detected by proteinuria. 2. Bacteriuria (the presence of Gram-negative rods in a concentration of 103 or more bacteria per ml. in repeated specimens of clean-voided urine), which was usually asymptomatic, was a common finding among women (4.4% of women investigated), was significantly more common in the rural area, was related to hypertension, and was found in 15% of females with diastolic pressures exceeding 110 mm. Hg in these surveys. Bacteriuria was found in only 0.5% of males. 3. The relationship between bacteriuria, as detected in one prevalence study, and hypertension was not sufficient to account for the differences in the prevalence of hypertension between these two female populations. 4. Mean arterial pressures as found in these Jamaican populations were lower than those reported in other surveys of Western negro populations. 5. Pregnant women in Jamaica had significantly lower systolic and diastolic pressures than those who were not pregnant. The prevalence of diastolic hypertension (100 mm. Hg or more) was higher in nulliparous than in parous women, and was least in those with moderate-sized families of two to five children. The prevalence of hypertension increased again in those with very large families, as did the prevalence of bacteriuria. 6. Body build, as measured by the ponderal index, had a small but consistent influence on arterial pressure, as measured indirectly, in Jamaican subjects under age 55. The absence of this relationship in the elderly may be due to increased mortality among obese hypertensives. 7. The use of a quantitative method for determining the genetic factor in arterial pressure suggests that its inheritance is graded, the resemblance in pressure between close relatives being independent of the range of pressure considered, and closely similar to the genetic factor in blood-pressure found in the Welsh. 8. The pressures of the middle-aged siblings of middle-aged hypertensives showed no bimodality in their distribution. © 1962, British Medical Journal Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Miall, W. E., Kass, E. H., Ling, J., & Stuart, K. L. (1962). Factors influencing arterial pressure in the general population in jamaica. British Medical Journal, 2(5303), 497–506. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.2.5303.497
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