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Alcohol consumption and blood pressure. The lipid research clinics prevalence study.

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TLDR
It is concluded that alcohol appears to have a modest but consistent and independent effect on systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
Abstract
The relationship between alcohol consumption and systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP) was examined in 2482 men and 2301 women 20 years of age or older in nine North American populations. Men at the highest level of alcohol consumption (greater than or equal to 30 ml alcohol per day) had the highest BP, while women either at the highest level of alcohol consumption or consuming no alcohol had the highest BP. Men aged greater than or equal to 35 years of age consuming greater than or equal to 30 ml alcohol per day were 1.5 to 2 times more likely to be hypertensive than non-drinkers. Multivariate analysis showed systolic and diastolic BP in both men and women to be positively and significantly (p less than 0.05) related to alcohol consumption, and this relationship was independent of the potential confounding effects of age, obesity, cigarette smoking, regular exercise, education, and gonadal hormone use in women. The regression coefficients indicated that an average of 30 ml of alcohol per day would produce a 2 to 6 mm Hg increase in systolic BP. Analyses suggested the univariate U-shaped alcohol-BP association in women was confounded by differences in obesity and cigarette smoking in nondrinking women, and by very low alcohol consumption in hypertensive women using medication. Additional analyses indicated that alcohol consumed in the 24 hours prior to the study was much more strongly associated with elevated BP than alcohol consumed in the week prior to the study excluding the previous 24 hours. We conclude that alcohol appears to have a modest but consistent and independent effect on systolic and diastolic BP.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Overweight and obesity as determinants of cardiovascular risk: the Framingham experience.

TL;DR: The overweight category is associated with increased relative and population attributable risk for hypertension and cardiovascular sequelae and interventions to reduce adiposity and avoid excess weight may have large effects on the development of risk factors and cardiovascular disease at an individual and population level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alcohol consumption and hypertension.

Stephen MacMahon
- 01 Feb 1987 - 
TL;DR: Of 30 cross-sectional population studies reviewed, the majority reported small but significant elevations in blood pressure in those consuming three drinks or more per day in comparison with nondrinkers, but firm conclusions about the long-term effects of alcohol restriction, particularly in moderate consumers who represent a large proportion in many populations, must await long- term controlled trials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lipoproteins and blood pressure as biological pathways for effect of moderate alcohol consumption on coronary heart disease.

TL;DR: The authors found that about half of the observed protection against CHD afforded by moderate alcohol consumption is mediated by an increase in high density lipoprotein cholesterol, but it is counterbalanced by a 17% increase in risk due to increased systolic blood pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alcohol Consumption and the Incidence of Hypertension: The Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study

TL;DR: The consumption of alcohol in amounts ≥210 g per week is an independent risk factor for hypertension in free-living North American populations and the consumption of low to moderate amounts of alcohol also appears to be associated with a higher risk of hypertension in black men.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alcohol and blood pressure: the INTERSALT study

TL;DR: The significant relation of heavy drinking (3-4 or more drinks/day) to blood pressure, observed in both men and women, and in younger and older men, was independent of and added to the effect on blood pressure of body mass index and urinary excretion of sodium and potassium.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Norepinephrine and Epinephrine Release and Adrenergic Mediation of Smoking-Associated Hemodynamic and Metabolic Events

TL;DR: Since significant smoking-associated increments, in pulse rate, blood pressure and blood lactate/pyruvate ratio, preceded measurable increments in plasma catecholamine concentrations, but were adrenergically mediated, these changes should be attributed to norepinephrine released locally from adrenergic axon terminals within the tissues rather than to increments in circulating catechlamines.
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Alcohol consumption and blood pressure Kaiser-Permanente Multiphasic Health Examination data.

TL;DR: The findings strongly suggest that regular use of three or more drinks of alcohol per day is a risk factor for hypertension.
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ALCOHOL AND BLOOD LIPIDS: The Cooperative Lipoprotein Phenotyping Study

TL;DR: Data from five study populations participating in the Cooperative Lipoprotein Phenotyping Study indicate strong relations between reported alcohol consumption and blood-lipids and Plasma-triglycerides showed a modest positive correlation with alcohol.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coffee, Alcohol and Risk of Coronary Heart Disease among Japanese Men Living in Hawaii

TL;DR: There was a strong negative association between moderate alcohol consumption and the risk of nonfatal myocardial infarction and death from coronary heart disease in a cohort of Japanese men living in Hawaii during a six-year period.
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Alcohol consumption, cardiovascular risk factors, and mortality in two Chicago epidemiologic studies.

TL;DR: Multivariate analysis of the association at baseline between problem drinking and cardiovascular risk factors among 1,233 white male employees of the Chicago Peoples Gas Company age 40-59 showed the 38 problem drinkers with significantly higher blood pressures and cigarette consumption and significantly lower relative weights than the others.
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