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What Level of Blood Pressure Is Concerning in Childhood?

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 130, Issue 5, Pages 800-808

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.319819

Keywords

atherosclerosis; blood pressure; child; adolescent; heart; hypertension

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The current criteria for diagnosing hypertension in children are not accurate enough, as emerging evidence suggests that detrimental effects of high blood pressure can occur even within the normal range according to current guidelines. Therefore, it is necessary to lower the threshold of concern for blood pressure in children and adolescents.
The 95th percentile of blood pressure (BP) among healthy children is the currently accepted level used to denote a hypertensive BP reading in pediatric patients. Yet, ample data have emerged showing that the detrimental effects of high BP can be demonstrated at BP levels considered normal by current guidelines. Cardiac, vascular, cognitive, and kidney effects have been shown starting at the 90th percentile in cross-sectional studies, and markers of adult cardiovascular disease appear in longitudinal cohorts whose members had modestly elevated or even normal BP as youth. This review summarizes data that support a lower threshold of concern for children and adolescents, and outlines some of the remaining questions to be answered before a lower threshold BP level could be adopted.

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