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Journal of Hypertension | 1996

Hyperinsulinaemia as a predictor of hypertension : an 11-year follow-up study in Japan

Makoto Tsuruta; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Hisashi Adachi; Tsutomu Imaizumi; Gakuji Nomura

Objective To examine the hypothesis that hyperinsulinaemia is associated with the development of borderline hypertension or hypertension. Design Blood pressure status in non-obese normotensives (< 140/90 mmHg, n = 135) people were re-examined after 11 years after the baseline examination. Participants were selected from a 1981 population-based health examination and had a high blood glucose level or more than a trace of glucose in their urine. Out of 319 people recruited for further examination of glucose tolerance status, 135 normotensive participants with body mass index < 26 kg/m2 and without diabetes according to World Health Organization criteria were re-examined at the follow-up survey. Results Sixty-two (46%) out of 135 normotensive participants were hypertensive (defined as blood pressure ≥ 140/90 mmHg) or receiving antihypertensive medication (n = 8) at the follow-up survey. Significant associations between the development of hypertension and baseline parameters were observed for systolic and diastolic blood pressure, serum triglycerides, high-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, fasting and 60 min post-load insulin levels, and the sum of insulin concentrations from fasting to 180 min after glucose challenge after adjustments for age and sex. Odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) for the future development of hypertension between the highest and the lowest tertiles of insulin levels were 4.06 (1.40–11.76) for fasting insulin, 4.25 (1.45–12.45) for 60 min post-glucose load insulin, and 3.88 (1.34–11.20) for the sum of insulin concentrations, after adjustment for age, sex, systolic blood pressure, body mass index and alcohol consumption. Further adjustments for serum triglycerides and serum creatinine did not affect the insulin–hypertension relationship. Conclusion The present study suggests that hyperinsulinemia is significantly related to the development of hypertension in non-obese and non-diabetic Japanese people.


Archive | 1994

Recent Trends in Cardiovascular Disease and Risk Factors in the Seven Countries Study: Japan

Yoshinori Koga; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Hisashi Adachi; Makoto Tsuruta; Hi Rom I Tashiro; Hironori Toshima

Rapid socioeconomic developments in Japan since the beginning of the Seven Countries Study in 1958 have brought remarkable changes in lifestyles and dietary patterns. Time trends in nutrient intake, risk factors, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality and morbidity have been monitored in men aged 40–64 in a Japanese cohort of the Seven Countries Study, in Tanushimaru, a typical farming town on Kyushu Island.


Diabetes Care | 1997

Hyperinsulinemia and the Development of ST-T Electrocardiographic Abnormalities: An 11-year follow-up study

Hisashi Adachi; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Makoto Tsuruta; David R. Jacobs; Richard S. Crow; Tsutomu Imaizumi

OBJECTIVE It has been suggested that insulin resistance and consequent hyperinsulinemia promote atherosclerosis, but few prospective studies have reported the relationships between hyperinsulinemia and the development of ST-T abnormalities in the 12-lead resting electrocardiogram (ECG) in populations in which atherosclerosis is rare. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS A total of 304 Japanese men and women, aged 20–69 years, selected for having high blood glucose or more than a trace-positive urine glucose from a population-based health examination in 1981, were followed for 11 years. Of these, 33 died, 1 from myocardial infarction, while 260/271 living were reexamined in 1992. The 237 subjects with a normal ECG at the baseline examination were analyzed. RESULTS Incident ST-T abnormalities occurred in 13/237 people. Insulin concentrations were positively associated with the development of ST-T abnormalities (relative risk approximately 8, comparing those in the highest versus lowest quartile of insulin values). Adjustment for age, sex, and systolic blood pressure or other risk factors had little effect on this relationship. CONCLUSIONS Hyperinsulinemia was related to the development of ST-T abnormalities in ECGs in the absence of the development of clinical signs of atherosclerosis, independent of blood pressure and other risk factors in men and women with mild glucose intolerance.


Hypertension | 1995

Serum N -Acetyl-β-d-Glucosaminidase Activity in Predicting the Development of Hypertension

Ryuichi Hashimoto; Hisashi Adachi; Hidemi Nishida; Makoto Tsuruta; Gakuji Nomura

We conducted a prospective study in residents of a small farming community in southwestern Japan to determine whether elevated serum N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase (NAG) activity would predict future hypertension. The 505 normotensive subjects (blood pressure, < 140/90 mm Hg; mean age, 52 +/- 12 years) were reexamined after 7 years; 111 (22%) had become hypertensive (defined as blood pressure > or = 140/90 mm Hg and/or taking antihypertensive medication at follow-up). After adjustment for age and sex, the development of hypertension was significantly related to body mass index (P < .002), the sum of skinfolds (P < .001), baseline blood pressure (P < .0001), serum cholesterol (P < .01), serum uric acid level (P < .0001), and serum NAG activity (P < .005). Elevated NAG activity showed an independent relationship to future hypertension (P < .005) after adjustments for age, sex, baseline blood pressure (systolic, diastolic, or mean), uric acid level, and the sum of skinfolds. Therefore, elevated serum NAG activity was an effective indicator of future hypertension, and it might therefore be related to functional and/or structural changes in the cardiovascular system.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 1998

Clustering of cardiovascular risk factors in hyperinsulinemia in Japanese without diabetes

Hisashi Adachi; David R. Jacobs; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Makoto Tsuruta; Tsutomu Imaizumi

Clustering of cardiovascular risk factors in hyperinsulinemia was investigated in 247 Japanese subjects without diabetes. After adjustment for age and sex, the highest quartile of the summed values of insulin concentrations after oral glucose loading showed high odds ratios (OR; 95% confidence intervals) for the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors: OR = 2.02 (1.07-3.83) for hypertension, 3.91 (1.82-8.40) for hypertriglyceridemia, 2.41 (1.30-4.46) for low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 2.41 (1.28-4.51) for impaired glucose tolerance, and 3.58 (1.44-8.88) for high uric acid. Two or more of these factors were clinically elevated in 50% of those in the highest quartile of the summed values of insulin, compared to 16-28% of those in the lower three quartiles. These findings were slightly attenuated after further adjustment for body mass index and sum of skinfolds. In conclusion, multiple risk factors for cardiovascular disease existed in the subjects with hyperinsulinemia in Japanese without diabetes.


Journal of Atherosclerosis and Thrombosis | 1995

Association of Hyperinsulinemia and Serum Free Fatty Acids with Serum High Density Lipoprotein-Cholesterol

Ryuichi Hashimoto; Hisashi Adachi; Makoto Tsuruta; Hiromi Tashiro; Hironori Toshima


The Kurume Medical Journal | 1987

Clinical manifestations of acute Coxsackie-B viral myocarditis and pericarditis with a special reference to serum enzyme patterns and long-term prognosis.

Ryuichi Hashimoto; Masahiko Ogata; Yoshinori Koga; Hironori Toshima


Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1996

0796 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HYPERTENSION, GLUCOSE INTOLERANCE, AND LEFT VENTRICULAR HYPERTROPHY

Makoto Tsuruta; Hisashi Adachi; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Tsutomu Inaizumi


Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1995

-0780- THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HYPERINSULINEMIA AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF ST-T ABNORMALITIES IN ELECTROCARDIOGRAM : AN 11-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY(PROCEEDINGS OF THE 59th ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING OF THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY)

Hisashi Adachi; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Makoto Tsuruta; Hiromi Tashiro; Tsutomu Imaizumi


Japanese Circulation Journal-english Edition | 1995

-0781- HYPERINSULINEMIA IN PREDICTING FUTURE HYPERTENSION : AN 11-YEAR FOLLOW-UP STUDY OF THE NON-DIABETIC SUBJECTS(PROCEEDINGS OF THE 59th ANNUAL SCIENTIFIC MEETING OF THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY)

Makoto Tsuruta; Hisashi Adachi; Ryuichi Hashimoto; Hiromi Tashiro; Hironori Toshima; Tsutomu Imaizumi; Gakuji Nomura

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