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Dive into the research topics where Johannes M. Van Rooyen is active.

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Featured researches published by Johannes M. Van Rooyen.


International Journal of Epidemiology | 2012

Are behavioural risk factors to be blamed for the conversion from optimal blood pressure to hypertensive status in Black South Africans? A 5-year prospective study

Aletta E. Schutte; Rudolph Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Carla Mt Fourie; Nico T. Malan; Catharina M. C. Mels; Wayne Smith; Sarah J. Moss; G. Wayne Towers; Edelweiss Wentzel-Viljoen; Hester H Vorster; Annamarie Kruger

BACKGROUND Longitudinal cohort studies in sub-Saharan Africa are urgently needed to understand cardiovascular disease development. We, therefore, explored health behaviours and conventional risk factors of African individuals with optimal blood pressure (BP) (≤ 120/80 mm Hg), and their 5-year prediction for the development of hypertension. METHODS The Prospective Urban Rural Epidemiology study in the North West Province, South Africa, started in 2005 and included African volunteers (n = 1994; aged > 30 years) from a sample of 6000 randomly selected households in rural and urban areas. RESULTS At baseline, 48% of the participants were hypertensive (≥ 140/90 mmHg). Those with optimal BP (n = 478) were followed at a success rate of 70% for 5 years (213 normotensive, 68 hypertensive, 57 deceased). Africans that became hypertensive smoked more than the normotensive individuals (68.2% vs 49.8%), and they also had a greater waist circumference [ratio of geometric means of 0.94 cm (95% CI: 0.86-0.99)] and greater amount of γ-glutamyltransferase [0.74 U/l (95% CI: 0.62-0.88)] at baseline. The 5-year change in BP was independently explained by baseline γ-glutamyltransferase [R(2) = 0.23, β = 0.13 U/l (95% CI: 0.01-0.19)]. Alcohol intake also predicted central systolic BP and carotid cross-sectional wall area (CSWA) at follow-up. Waist circumference was another predictor of BP changes [β = 0.18 cm (95% CI: 0.05-0.24)] and CSWA. HIV infection was inversely associated with increased BP. CONCLUSIONS During the 5 years, 24% of Africans with optimal BP developed hypertension. The surge in hypertension in Africa is largely explained by modifiable risk factors. Public health strategies should focus aggressively on lifestyle to prevent a catastrophic burden on the national health system.


Journal of Hypertension | 2011

Comparison of central pressure estimates obtained from SphygmoCor, Omron HEM-9000AI and carotid applanation tonometry

Jan Kips; Aletta E Schutte; Sebastian Vermeersch; Hugo W. Huisman; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Matthew Glyn; Catharina Maria Theresia Fourie; Leoné Malan; Rudolph Schutte; Luc Van Bortel; Patrick Segers

Background The Omron HEM-9000AI is the first automated tonometer to provide an estimate of central SBP (cSBP), which is considered to be more predictive of cardiovascular events than brachial pressure. However, considerable differences between the cSBP estimate of Omron and that of SphygmoCor have been reported, but not explained. This study assesses the sources of differences between both cSBP estimates and provides a handle on which estimate is closest to reality. Method For this purpose, aortic cSBP derived from calibrated carotid SBP was used as device- and algorithm-independent reference. Radial, brachial and carotid applanation tonometry were performed in 143 black South Africans, aged 39–91 years. Each individual was measured with an Omron HEM-9000AI and a SphygmoCor. Results When using both devices as advocated by their manufacturers, the corresponding cSBP estimates correlated strongly (r = 0.99, P < 0.001), but the Omron estimate was 18.8 (4.3) mmHg higher than the SphygmoCor estimate. Aortic SBP was in between both estimates: 11.7 (5.5) mmHg lower than cSBP-Omron and 7.1 (5.0) mmHg higher than cSBP-SphygmoCor. Alternative calibration of the radial SphygmoCor-curves with radial instead of brachial pressures yielded a cSBP that was 3.0 (4.2) mmHg lower than aortic SBP. The shape of the recorded pressure waves was similar in both devices: less than 5% of the observed cSBP difference was caused by differences in wave shape. Conclusion The results from this study demonstrate that the considerable difference between the central pressure estimates of Omron HEM-9000AI and SphygmoCor is due to algorithm differences, and suggest that the overestimation by Omron HEM-9000AI is larger than the underestimation by SphygmoCor.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2011

Arterial Stiffness Profiles: Investigating Various Sections of the Arterial Tree of African and Caucasian People

Aletta E. Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Rudolph Schutte; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Leoné Malan; Nicolaas T. Malan; Manja Reimann

In Africans, arterial stiffness progression seems more pronounced compared to Caucasians. We compared the arterial stiffness profiles of different age groups and focused on muscular arteries and two more central arterial segments in African and Caucasian people from South Africa. In African (N = 374) and Caucasian (N = 376) participants (20–70 years), we measured carotid-radial (C-R) and carotid-dorsalis pedis (C-DP) pulse wave velocity (PWV) and aortic characteristic impedance (Zao). Major findings were that normotensive and high-normal/hypertensive (HT) Caucasians indicated increased trends of C-R PWV with aging (P = .029 and P = .067), not seen in the African groups (P = .122 and P = .526). Both ethnic groups showed significant increases of C-DP PWV and Zao with aging. High-normal/hypertensive Africans had significantly stiffer arteries than hypertensive Caucasians for almost all age groups, and for all stiffness measures. African C-R PWV correlated significantly with blood pressure (BP), but not with age. Opposite results were observed for Caucasians. In conclusion, the stiffness of muscular arteries is already elevated in young Africans, in both those with normal or elevated BP. This is possibly due to an earlier deterioration during childhood, or perhaps already present from birth. Also, in Caucasians stiffness seems more age-related, while in Africans it seems to be more pressure-related.


Biological Psychology | 2006

Specific coping strategies of Africans during urbanization: Comparing cardiovascular responses and perception of health data

Leoné Malan; Aletta E. Schutte; Nicolaas T. Malan; Maria Philipina Wissing; Hester H Vorster; Hendrik Stefanus Steyn; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Hugo W. Huisman

Specific coping mechanisms of Africans during urbanization were compared to and correlated with cardiovascular responses and perception of health data. Subjects included men (N=286) and women (N=360). The COPE questionnaire classified subjects as active (AC) or passive (PC) copers and the General Health Questionnaire measured subjective perception of health. The Finapres recorded blood pressure continuously before and during application of a handgrip test. Analyses adjusting for age, body mass index and resting cardiovascular data revealed that AC rural subjects showed predominantly cardiac responses and PC rural subjects predominantly vascular responses. All urbanized African men and women showed higher resting blood pressure, vascular responsiveness and hypertension prevalences than their rural counterparts. All rural AC subjects, especially women, and all urban PC subjects, especially men, reported a poorer perception of health. In conclusion, subjects with a PC style showed a predominantly vascular response in rural and urban areas whereas subjects with an AC style seem to shift from a predominant cardiac output response to a predominant vascular resistance response when moving from a rural to an urban area.


Regulatory Peptides | 2007

Aging influences the level and functions of fasting plasma ghrelin levels: the POWIRS-Study.

Aletta E. Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Rudolph Schutte; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Leoné Malan; N.T. Malan

OBJECTIVE Ghrelin, known for its orexigenic activity, also have functions such as vasodilation and a growth hormone releasing action. It is uncertain whether these functions change with increasing age. This study aimed to determine whether ghrelin levels differ between young and older women with different levels of obesity; and secondly whether the associations of ghrelin with metabolic syndrome (MS) components, adipocytokines, coagulation factors, and cortisol change with increasing age. METHODS AND RESULTS Caucasian women (N=107) were divided into young (19-29 years) and older groups (30-56 years). Fasting ghrelin, leptin, adiponectin, glucose, insulin, cortisol, fibrinogen and plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) levels were determined. Blood pressure (BP), body mass index and waist circumferences were measured. Older lean women showed lower levels of ghrelin (p<0.05) than young lean women, with no differences regarding BP, obesity, lipids, adipokines or insulin resistance (IR). Ghrelin levels of older women remained constant with increasing obesity, but younger women showed significantly reduced ghrelin levels in obese groups. Only younger women showed significant correlations between ghrelin and leptin, adiponectin, fibrinogen and PAI-1 (adjusted for age, obesity and menstrual phase), whereas both age groups showed significant correlations with IR. In younger women factor analysis grouped ghrelin with coagulation factors and all MS components. In older women ghrelin was absent from the MS cluster, but was associated with lower BP, cortisol and IR. CONCLUSIONS Ghrelin levels were not significantly elevated in lean older women, and did not change with increased obesity in older women--as were observed in younger women. The functions of ghrelin also seem to change with increased age since only in young women ghrelin was associated with obesity, coagulation factors and leptin.


American Journal of Hypertension | 2009

Blood glutathione and subclinical atherosclerosis in African men: the SABPA study

Rudolph Schutte; Aletta E. Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Nicolaas T. Malan; Szabolcs Péter; Carla M.T. Fourie; Francois H. van der Westhuizen; Roan Louw; Cindy A. Botha; Leoné Malan

BACKGROUND Sub-Saharan Africans face an increasing burden of hypertension and related cardiac and cerebrovascular morbidity and mortality, making the identification of factors leading to early vascular abnormalities imperative. METHODS We investigated the possible influence of the antioxidant glutathione (GSH) on early subclinical atherosclerosis in 63 hypertensive (aged 45.2 years) and 34 normotensive (aged 38.9 years; P < 0.001) nondiabetic African men. We measured ambulatory daytime systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP) as well as daytime mean arterial pressure (MAP), carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT), and calculated the cross-sectional wall area. We determined the reduced form of GSH in whole blood and blood glucose in serum. RESULTS Blood glucose (110 vs. 92 mg/dl; P < 0.001) and CIMT (0.75 vs. 0.61 mm; P < 0.001) were higher in hypertensives compared to normotensives. No significant difference existed for GSH. Associations in normotensives suggested the hypotensive effect of GSH after single (SBP: r = -0.35, P < or = 0.05; DBP: r = -0.37, P < or = 0.05; MAP: r = -0.38, P < or = 0.05) and multiple (SBP: B = -0.015, P < 0.05; DBP: B = -0.011, P < 0.05; MAP: B = -0.012, P < 0.05) regression analyses. In hypertensives, CIMT (B = -0.00027, P < 0.01) and cross-sectional wall area (CSWA) (B = -0.0066, P < 0.05) correlated negatively with GSH. These findings were consistent after excluding 10 human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive hypertensive subjects. CONCLUSIONS In hypertensive African men, CIMT is negatively associated with GSH, suggesting a possible contributory role of attenuated GSH levels in the development of subclinical atherosclerosis.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2007

Differences and similarities regarding adiponectin investigated in African and Caucasian women

Aletta E. Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Rudolph Schutte; Leoné Malan; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Nico T. Malan; Peter Schwarz

OBJECTIVE Concentrations of adiponectin, an adipocytokine with insulin-sensitizing actions, may vary according to ethnic group. This study aimed to determine whether fasting adiponectin levels of Caucasian and African women differ. A second objective was to determine which components of the metabolic syndrome are more closely related to adiponectinemia in both groups. DESIGN A cross-sectional study including 102 urban African and 115 Caucasian women with a wide range of obesity aged 20-55 years. METHODS Anthropometric measurements were taken, namely weight, height, body mass index, waist circumference, and hip circumference. Cardiovascular measurements included blood pressure and arterial compliance. Fasting blood samples were taken to determine glucose, insulin, C-peptide, leptin, adiponectin, and lipid levels. RESULTS Mean adiponectin levels of the whole groups did not differ, but normal weight African women (N = 38) showed marginally lower adiponectin levels than their Caucasian counterparts (N = 41; P = 0.047). No differences in adiponectin were shown for overweight and obese women. Separate multiple regression analyses for ethnic groups showed that only homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) significantly contributed to the variance in adiponectin levels of African women, whereas leptin, triacylglycerol levels and HOMA-IR contributed significantly to adiponectin variance in Caucasian women. An additional multiple regression analysis in a combined ethnic group (N = 217) showed ethnicity to be a significant contributor to variances in adiponectin levels. CONCLUSIONS Even though adiponectin levels of these ethnic groups are similar, different associations of adiponectin with leptin and triacylglycerol levels might indicate that there are ethnic differences regarding the mechanistic functions of adiponectin within the scope of the metabolic syndrome.


Hypertension Research | 2011

Blood pressure variability is significantly associated with ECG left ventricular mass in normotensive Africans: The SABPA Study

Catharina Maria Theresia Fourie; Hugo W. Huisman; Nicolaas T. Malan; Aletta E. Schutte; Rudolph Schutte; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Leoné Malan

The prognostic significance of blood pressure (BP) variability has lately enjoyed considerable attention. The need for early markers of cardiovascular dysfunction is imperative in black South Africans who have a significant risk for cardiovascular disease. We therefore compared 24-h BP variability with various traditional and advanced BP measurements, regarding their association with sub-clinical organ damage in black and white South Africans. The study included 409 African and Caucasian teachers aged 25–60 yrs. We measured office BP, 1-min continuous (finger) BP, ambulatory BP, BP reactivity and determined weighted 24-h BP variability. Albumin-to-creatinine ratio, Cornell product and carotid cross-sectional wall area (CSWA) were measures of organ damage. Africans had higher 24-h BP, BP variability, BP reactivity and sub-clinical organ damage (P<0.001). Correlations of BP variability with organ damage were overall weak when compared with other BP measurements. In normotensive groups, we found an independent association of 24-h systolic BP (SBP) variability with Cornell product only in Africans (r=0.37; P=0.01), confirmed in multiple regression models, with 24-h SBP included in the model. Only in hypertensive Caucasians, a significant correlation between CSWA and 24-h SBP variability was evident (r=0.30; P=0.01), although CSWA indicated stronger correlations with office or 24-h SBP than 24-h SBP variability. To conclude, 24-h SBP variability could potentially be an effective measure for the early detection of normotensive Africans at increased risk for the development of cardiovascular complications. Its usefulness based on associations with target organ damage in hypertensive groups seems to be less than traditional office or 24-h BP measurements.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2010

Dimethylarginines: Their vascular and metabolic roles in Africans and Caucasians

Aletta E. Schutte; Rudolph Schutte; Hugo W. Huisman; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Carla M.T. Fourie; Leoné Malan; Nico T. Malan; Edzard Schwedhelm; Sebastian Strimbeanu; Maike Anderssohn; Rainer H. Böger

OBJECTIVE Alarming increases in hypertension and type 2 diabetes among Africans accentuate the need to identify factors that could serve as targets for prevention or treatment. In Caucasian populations, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA), the predominant endogenous nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, is associated with cardiovascular disease and insulin resistance (IR). ADMAs counterpart, symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA), originally thought to be inert, was recently also linked with cardiovascular risk. Since little information regarding ADMA or SDMA is available for Africans, our aim was to explore the relationships of ADMA and SDMA with measures of arterial stiffness and IR in Africans and Caucasians from South Africa. METHODS The study consisted of 235 nonsmoking, nondiabetic, nonobese, human immunodeficiency virus-uninfected Africans (n=64) and Caucasians (n=171), aged 20-70 years. We measured blood pressure, pulse wave velocity, ADMA, SDMA, and IR (homeostasis model assessment, HOMA). RESULTS African and Caucasian men had similar ADMA and SDMA, whereas Caucasian women had higher ADMA and SDMA than African women (P<0.05). African men and Caucasian women indicated strong correlations of ADMA with arterial stiffness (r=0.47, P=0.021; r=0.26, P=0.008), confirmed in multivariate analyses. Caucasian participants showed negative associations between SDMA and HOMA, being strongest in the men (r=-0.41; P=0.002). CONCLUSION Our results indicate that ADMA is independently associated with vascular dysfunction in African men and Caucasian women. A strong, independent negative association of SDMA with IR was found only in Caucasian participants. The molecular explanation for this is unclear, but these findings motivate experimental studies that could shed more light on these relationships.


Blood Pressure | 2011

Baroreceptor sensitivity, cardiovascular responses and ECG left ventricular hypertrophy in men: The SABPA study

Lisa Van Lill; Leoné Malan; Johannes M. Van Rooyen; Faans Steyn; Manja Reimann; Tjalf Ziemssen

Abstract Aim. Research has shown a significant relationship between hypertension and attenuated baroreceptor sensitivity (BRS), which in turn reflects alterations of autonomic control of the cardiovascular system. The objective of this study was to compare the BRS of African and Caucasian men and determine possible associations with blood pressure and left ventricular hypertrophy. Materials and methods. Participants included African (n = 82) and Caucasian (n = 100) male teachers, aged between 20 and 65 years, recruited in the North-West Province, South Africa. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was conducted for a 22–23-h period and, thereafter, cardiovascular parameters were recorded with a Finometer and 12-lead ECG during rest and while challenging the cardiovascular system with the cold pressor and Stroop color–word conflict tests. Spontaneous BRS was calculated as well as the Cornell product [marker of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH)]. Results. The African men had significantly lower BRS stress responses. Attenuated BRS coupled to an α-adrenergic response pattern predicted elevation of blood pressure in the African men. BRS reduction did not prove to be a significant predictor of LVH. Conclusion. Lower BRS, especially during stress, may pose a significant health threat for African men regarding earlier development or promotion of α-adrenergic-driven hypertension and greater risk for cardiovascular disease.

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