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KMID : 4412620180240010008
Clinical Hypertension
2018 Volume.24 No. 1 p.8 ~ p.8
High out-of-clinic blood pressure is associated with adiposity indicators in leisure physical activity practitioners in Midwest Brazil
Giglio Bruna M.

Fernandes Renata C.
Marini Ana B.
Mota Joao F.
Pimentel Gustavo D.
Abstract
Background: Several diseases, such as obesity, hypertension and type 2 diabetes are frequently associated with metabolic abnormalities, high costs of healthcare and morbi-mortality; thus the aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between out-of-clinic high blood pressure and chronic disease-associated adiposity indicators in practitioners of leisure physical activity.

Methods: A cross-sectional study with 414 subjects of both genders aged 24?65 years. Data were collected by trained interviewers in five public parks. Body Mass Index (BMI), triceps skinfold and waist circumference (WC) were evaluated. Exercise training, smoking status, alcohol consumption and hypertension diagnosis were self-reported. Casual glycemia concentrations were collected and blood pressure was measured out-of-clinic once during the study. Participants with systolic ¡Ã140 mmHg and diastolic ¡Ã90 mmHg blood pressures were classified as high blood pressure. All analyses were adjusted for age and sex.

Results: High-blood pressure was diagnosed in 31.4% (n =?130), but 34 (8.3%) from patients took medication anti-hypertensive and were previously hypertension diagnosed. Participants with high blood pressure had a higher BMI (25.66 vs. 26.87 kg/m2; p =?0.012), WC (90.92 vs. 95.02 cm; p =?0.001), and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (p
Conclusions: Adiposity indicators are associated with high out-of-clinic blood pressure measured in practitioners of leisure physical activity.
KEYWORD
Hypertension, Adiposity, Metabolic diseases, Exercise
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