4.3 Article

Waist-to-height ratio as an indicator of high blood pressure in urban Indian school children

Journal

INDIAN PEDIATRICS
Volume 52, Issue 9, Pages 773-778

Publisher

SPRINGER INDIA
DOI: 10.1007/s13312-015-0715-x

Keywords

Anthropometry; Hypertension; Obesity; Risk

Categories

Funding

  1. ICMR [5/4/8-10/NCD-II]
  2. NIH/NICHD [K24 HD058795]

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To examine the utility of waist-to-height ratio to identify risk of high blood pressure when compared to body mass index and waist circumference in South Indian urban school children. Secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional study. Urban schools around Bangalore, India. 1913 children (58.1% males) aged 6-16 years with no prior history of chronic illness (PEACH study). Height, weight, waist circumference and of blood pressure were measured. Children with blood pressure a parts per thousand yen90(th) percentile of age-, sex-, and height-adjusted standards were labelled as having high blood pressure. 13.9% had a high waist-to-height ratio, 15.1% were overweight/obese and 21.7% had high waist circumference. High obesity indicators were associated with an increased risk of high blood pressure. The adjusted risk ratios (95% CI) of high systolic blood pressure with waist-to-height ratio, body mass index and waist circumference were 2.48 (1.76, 3.47), 2.59 (1.66, 4.04) and 2.38 (1.74, 3.26), respectively. Similar results were seen with high diastolic blood pressure. Obesity indicators, especially waist-to-height ratio due to its ease of measurement, can be useful initial screening tools for risk of high blood pressure in urban Indian school children.

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