Abstract

Uncontrolled blood pressure is a threat to diabetic patients' life. The aim of this study was to identify risk factors of hypertension among diabetic patients at different stages from Yaoundé Central Hospital and Etoug-Ebe Baptist Health Center of Cameroon. A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted for 6 months, and 109 participants (types 1 and 2), aged 24–81 years, were enrolled using simple random sampling. A pretested structured questionnaire was used to collect sociodemographic data, habitual behaviors, clinical history blood pressure, and anthropometric measures. The prevalence of hypertension was 86.2%. Of the total, 13.8% participants were normotensive, 32.1% stage 1 hypertensive, and 54.1% stage 2 hypertensive. Being a male (p = 0.046) and not smoking (p = 0.036) were negatively associated with stage 1 hypertension whereas eating less than 3 times (p = 0.046) and duration of diabetes greater than 9 years among women (p = 0.039) were positively associated. Age above 40 years (p = 0.002) was negatively associated with stage 2 hypertension. However, age above 40 years had a negative effect among Christian, less educated diabetics, people having diabetes for more than 9 years, and those on medical treatment (5.556 ≤ specific OR ≤ 10.278). Duration of diabetes (age-adjusted OR = 1.155; p = 0.003) and abnormal waist circumference (crude OR = 4.074; p = 0.024) were positively associated with stage 2. Abnormal waist-to-hip ratio (crude OR = 3.773; p = 0.028) and feeding rate greater than 2 times a day (WHR-adjusted OR = 3.417; p = 0.046) were positively associated with hypertension (stages 1 and 2). This study suggests that hypertension, present at its two stages, is a serious health issue among diabetic patients. Thus, appropriate intervention should be put in place to prevent and control hypertension by managing identified risk factors.

Highlights

  • Hypertension is becoming a serious concern in low- and middle-income countries based on the statistics

  • The present study showed that hypertension has a high magnitude among diabetics from the Yaoundé Central Hospital and the Etoug-Ebe Baptist Health Center

  • It highlighted the fact that the nature of significant risk factors changed with hypertension evolution, except duration of diabetes that was present at each stage

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Summary

Introduction

Hypertension is becoming a serious concern in low- and middle-income countries based on the statistics. In Cameroon, hypertension is still uncommon in rural Cameroon but occurs frequently in urban community. The prevalence spans from 5.7% in rural settings [4] to 47.5% in urban milieu [5], with a national average survey of 31.0% [6]. The burden of hypertension is forecast to increase by 2025 as it is predicted to reach a total of 1.56 billion worldwide [7]. This rise is clearly associated with the adoption of Western lifestyles by people in developing countries. The increase of morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular diseases related to hypertension is expected to follow [8,9,10]

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