The Pan African Medical Journal (Sep 2017)

Vascular hyperreactivity in black Cameroonian hypertensive and normotensive patients: a comparative study

  • Sylvie Ndongo Amougou,
  • DieudonnéDanwe,
  • Hamadou Ba,
  • Bonaventure Jemea,
  • Liliane Kuate Mfeukeu,
  • Christian Ngongang Ouankou,
  • Jingi Musa Ahmadou,
  • Samuel Kingue

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2017.28.2.13471
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 2

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: Vascular hyperreactivity is a risk factor and a factor predicting hypertension (high blood pressure). Unlike other continents where several studies were carried out, it has rarely been studied in black Africa in general and in Cameroon in particular. METHODS: vascular reactivity was measured by the cold test. Vascular hyperreactivity was defined as an increase in blood pressure 20 mmHg for systolic and/or 15 mmHg for diastolic. Khi2, Man-Withney, Wilcoxon's signed ranks and logistic regression tests were used for statistical analysis. RESULTS: a total of 31 hypertensive and 31 normotensive patients matched by age and sex participated in this study. Vascular hyperreactivity was present in 77.4% hypertensive patients and 51.6% normotensive patients. There was a significant association between vascular hyperreactivity and hypertension [OR = 3.2 (1.07 - 9.63), p = 0.034]. The median arterial pressure was higher in responders compared to non-responders in the normotensive group. Age 45 years, female sex, obesity and family history of hypertension appeared to be associated with vascular hyperreactivity, but only in normotensive patients. CONCLUSION: vascular hyperreactivity appears to be a risk factor for high blood pressure in black Cameroonians. It appeared to be associated with low blood pressure, age, sex, obesity and family history of hypertension but this was only in the normotensive.

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