Arquivos Brasileiros de Cardiologia (Apr 2015)

Quality of Life on Arterial Hypertension: Validity of Known Groups of MINICHAL

  • Ana Lúcia Soares Soutello,
  • Roberta Cunha Matheus Rodrigues,
  • Fernanda Freire Jannuzzi,
  • Thaís Moreira São-João,
  • Gabriela Giordano Martinix,
  • Wilson Nadruz Jr.,
  • Maria-Cecília Bueno Jayme Gallani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5935/abc.20150009
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 104, no. 4
pp. 299 – 307

Abstract

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Introductions: In the care of hypertension, it is important that health professionals possess available tools that allow evaluating the impairment of the health-related quality of life, according to the severity of hypertension and the risk for cardiovascular events. Among the instruments developed for the assessment of health-related quality of life, there is the Mini-Cuestionario of Calidad de Vida en la Hipertensión Arterial (MINICHAL) recently adapted to the Brazilian culture. Objective: To estimate the validity of known groups of the Brazilian version of the MINICHAL regarding the classification of risk for cardiovascular events, symptoms, severity of dyspnea and target-organ damage. Methods: Data of 200 hypertensive outpatients concerning sociodemographic and clinical information and health-related quality of life were gathered by consulting the medical charts and the application of the Brazilian version of MINICHAL. The Mann-Whitney test was used to compare health-related quality of life in relation to symptoms and target-organ damage. The Kruskal-Wallis test and ANOVA with ranks transformation were used to compare health-related quality of life in relation to the classification of risk for cardiovascular events and intensity of dyspnea, respectively. Results: The MINICHAL was able to discriminate health-related quality of life in relation to symptoms and kidney damage, but did not discriminate health-related quality of life in relation to the classification of risk for cardiovascular events. Conclusion: The Brazilian version of the MINICHAL is a questionnaire capable of discriminating differences on the health‑related quality of life regarding dyspnea, chest pain, palpitation, lipothymy, cephalea and renal damage.

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