Abstract

Background: Sedentary behaviour and physical inactivity along with body mass are identified as critical determinants of vascular health along with body mass in young adults. However, the relationship between potential physical health and anthropometric variables with high blood Eid pressure remain unexplored in young adults from the United Arab Emirates region. Methodology: We administered a cross-sectional study in young adults assessing their self-reported physical activity levels, anthropometric variables (body mass index and waist circumference) and ambulatory blood pressure. The associations among potential physical health, anthropometric variables and high blood pressure were analysed through logistic regression after necessary transformation. Results: Of 354 participants (176 males, 178 females), we found 17.79% (n = 63) had higher mean arterial pressure. Males (n = 40; 22.73%) had higher risk of hypertension than females (n = 12.92%). Weekly physical activity levels (β = −0.001; p = 0.002), age (β = −0.168; p = 0.005) and gender (β = −0.709; p = 0.028) were found to be more strongly associated with hypertension risk than the body mass index (β = 0.093; p = 0.075), waist circumference (β = 0.013; p = 0.588) and the weekly sitting time (β = 0.000; p = 0.319) of the individuals. Conclusions: Lower physical activity was associated with hypertension risk compared to other modifiable risk factors such as waist circumference, body mass index and sedentary time in college-going young adults. Public health measures should continue to emphasise optimisation of weekly physical activity levels to mitigate vascular health risks at educational institution levels.

Highlights

  • Epidemiological evidence has identified that non-modifiable risk factors and modifiable risk factors play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of higher blood pressure [2,3]

  • We found a consistent and significant association of age, gender, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference and physical activity levels with the hypertension risk, except the sitting time

  • We found that males are more prone to early hypertension risk (MAP > 99.1 mmHg) than females, likely due to their large weight range and waist–hip circumference compared to the females, which was evident in our study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Asia Pacific and low–middle-income countries [1] Adults doubled their hypertension risk between 1975 (594 million) and 2015 (1.13 billion). Epidemiological evidence has identified that non-modifiable risk factors (age, gender) and modifiable risk factors (body mass index, physical activity) play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of higher blood pressure [2,3]. Higher blood pressure risk is likely associated with male gender due to associated lifestyle factors such as diet, smoking and personality traits [4]. The relationship between potential physical health and anthropometric variables with high blood Eid pressure remain unexplored in young adults from the United Arab Emirates region. Methodology: We administered a cross-sectional study in young adults assessing their self-reported physical activity levels, anthropometric variables (body mass index and waist circumference) and ambulatory blood pressure.

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call