Publication | Closed Access
Blood pressure in childhood. The National Health Examination Survey.
71
Citations
10
References
1979
Year
HypertensionNational Probability SamplePediatric Heart DiseaseAnthropometric IndicatorAdolescent Cardiovascular HealthBlood PressureBody CompositionPublic HealthCardiologyCycle IiBlood Pressure MonitoringPopulation ChildrenHealth PolicyChild DevelopmentChildhood ObesityCardiovascular DiseaseChild HealthPediatricsBlood Pressure ControlChild NutritionMedicine
Data were analyzed from the U.S. Health Examination Survey (Cycle II) to determine relationships between blood pressure and other characteristics. This survey examined a national probability sample of children aged 6-11 years. Significant relationships were found for blood pressure and the following variables: chronological and skeletal age, skinfold thickness (adiposity) and other anthropometric measurements, pulse rate, and systolic murmurs. These relationships may be interpreted as indicating important relationships between blood pressure and growth, adiposity, and hemodynamic manifestations of cardiac output. Data from this representative population portray blood pressure relationships in childhood.
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