1. Twenty-four-hour blood pressure changes in young Somalian blacks after migration to Italy.
- Author
-
Modesti PA, Tamburini C, Hagi MI, Cecioni I, Migliorini A, and Neri Serneri GG
- Subjects
- Adult, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Emigration and Immigration, Female, Humans, Italy, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Retrospective Studies, Somalia ethnology, Blood Pressure physiology, Circadian Rhythm physiology
- Abstract
Blood pressure changes induced by migration from Somalia to Italy were studied in 25 normotensive clinical healthy blacks (aged 29 +/- 6 years) who had immigrated from Mogadishu to Florence. Basal and 24-h ambulatory blood pressure, venous compliance, and daily urinary electrolyte excretion were measured on arrival and 6 months later. After 6 months both basal pressure (P < .05 for systolic blood pressure, P < .01 for diastolic blood pressure) and 24-h blood pressure (P < .004 for systolic blood pressure, P < .01 for diastolic blood pressure) had significantly increased. Urinary sodium excretion had also increased (P < .001), whereas plasma renin activity was significantly reduced (P < .05). The ambulatory pressure increase was significantly related to the urinary sodium increase (r = 0.49; P < .01). At follow-up 8 of 25 blacks were hypertensive according to the WHO definition (basal diastolic blood pressure > 90 mm Hg). In conclusion, an increase in 24-h blood pressure is detectable after immigration and changes seems to be mainly related to higher sodium intake in the Western diet.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF