Elevated blood pressure and headache disorders in China – associations, under-treatment and implications for public health
He, MianWang; Yu, Shengyuan; Liu, Ruozhuo; Yang, Xiaosu; Zhao, Gang; Qiao, Xiangyang; Feng, Jiachun; Fang, Yannan; Cao, Xiutang; Steiner, Timothy J.
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Åpne
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2659074Utgivelsesdato
2015Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Sammendrag
Background:Both hypertension (HTN) and headache disorders are highly prevalent worldwide. Our purpose, in anationwide study of the Chinese general population, was to evaluate any association between primary headachedisorders and elevated blood pressure (eBP). We could not collect data on antihypertensive therapy, but took theview that, whatever such therapy might be taken, eBP was a sign that it was failing to meet treatment needs.Therefore, as a secondary purpose, important from the public-health perspective, we would present the prevalenceof eBP (treated or not) as indicative of unmet health-care need in China.Methods:This was a questionnaire-based nationwide cross-sectional door-to-door survey using clusterrandom-sampling, selecting one adult (18–65 years) per household. Headache was diagnosed by ICHD-IIcriteria and eBP as systolic blood pressure≥140 mmHg and/or diastolic blood pressure≥90 mmHg.Chi-squared test and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to assess the strength andsignificance of associations. We set significance atP≤0.05.Results:Of 5,041 survey participants (participation rate 94.1 %), 154 were excluded because of missing BPdata, leaving 4,987 for analysis [mean age: 43.6 ± 12.8 years; male 2,532 (mean age: 43.4 ± 12.9 years); female2,455 (mean age 43.9 ± 12.8 years)]. There were 466 participants with migraine, 535 with tension typeheadache (TTH) and 48 with all causes of headache on≥15 days/month. The prevalence of eBP was 22.1 %(males 22.9 %, females 21.3 %). No associations of eBP with any of the headache disorders survivedmultivariate adjusted analysis. The demographic and anthropometric variables most strongly associated witheBP were higher age (AOR 3.7) and being overweight (AOR 2.4), seen in both genders. Less strong were malegender, lower educational level and urban habitation.Conclusions:We found no clear-cut associations between eBP and any headache disorder. The associationswith demographic and anthropometric variables may have acted as confounders in past reports to the contrary. We did find an alarmingly high prevalence of eBP, recognizing that this signals substantialunder-treatment in China of a serious condition, and therefore a major public-health concern.