Associations between obesity class and ambulatory blood pressure curves in African American women

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Obesity Pub Date : 2025-02-19 DOI:10.1002/oby.24230
Raphiel J. Murden, Nicole D. Fields, Zachary T. Martin, Benjamin B. Risk, Alvaro Alonso, Amita Manatunga, Christy L. Erving, Reneé Moore, Shivika Udaipuria, Arshed Quyyumi, Viola Vaccarino, Tené T. Lewis
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Abstract

Objective

Studies of body size and blood pressure (BP) in African American women typically focus on obesity overall or collapse obesity classes II and III into a single subgroup, ignoring potential heterogeneity in associations across categories. Moreover, ambulatory BP outcomes are primarily analyzed as mean daytime and/or nighttime BP, without examination of circadian changes during the day-to-night transition or the full 24-h cycle.

Methods

Functional data analysis methods were used to examine whether obesity categories modified ambulatory monitoring-assessed BP circadian rhythm in a cohort of 407 African American women.

Results

Age-adjusted systolic BP (SBP) was 4 mm Hg (95% CI: 0.4–8.4) higher among women with class I or II obesity than those with normal weight or overweight from 12:30 p.m. through 8:00 a.m. Age-adjusted differences in SBP among women with class III obesity versus those with normal weight or overweight were 6 mm Hg (95% CI: 0.7–10.8) during daytime hours and increased to 11 mm Hg (95% CI: 5.8–16.0) overnight. Compared with all other BMI categories, SBP of women with class III obesity declined more slowly from day to night.

Conclusions

Circadian BP among African American women was distinct among those with class III obesity compared with those with other body weight categories, suggesting that intervention efforts in African American women should target this group.

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来源期刊
Obesity
Obesity 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
11.70
自引率
1.40%
发文量
261
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Obesity is the official journal of The Obesity Society and is the premier source of information for increasing knowledge, fostering translational research from basic to population science, and promoting better treatment for people with obesity. Obesity publishes important peer-reviewed research and cutting-edge reviews, commentaries, and public health and medical developments.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Global cancer burden attributable to excess body weight, 1990 to 2021, decomposed by population size, aging, and epidemiological change Associations between obesity class and ambulatory blood pressure curves in African American women Adherence to self-monitoring and behavioral goals is associated with improved weight loss in an mHealth randomized-controlled trial Trends in educational inequalities in obesity-attributable mortality in England and Wales, Finland, and Italy
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