Login | English | Deutsch

 Forschungsinformationssystem Universität Greifswald




Originalartikel | erschienen - Druck

Serum thyrotropin levels and blood pressure response to exercise in a population-based study.


THYROID 2011 ; 21(8): 829 - 835






Bibliometrische Indikatoren



Impact Factor = 4,792

DOI = 10.1089/thy.2010.0277

PubMed-ID = 21595557


Autoren

Lorbeer R*, Dörr M, Ittermann T, Koch B, Ewert R, Rettig R, Nauck M, Felix S, Wallaschofski H, Völzke H


Abstract

Background: Studies on the relation between thyroid function and exercise blood pressure (EBP) are rare and not population-based, and have yielded inconsistent results. The aim of this study was to investigate whether serum thyrotropin (TSH) levels are related to increased EBP. Methods: Cross-sectional data from 1438 subjects (711 women) aged 25-83 years without histories of cardiovascular diseases from the 5-year follow-up of the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania (SHIP-1) were analyzed. Blood pressure was measured at the 100?W stage of a symptom-limited bicycle ergometry test. Increased EBP was defined as a value above the sex- and age-specific 80th percentile of participants with serum TSH levels within the reference range (0.25-2.12?mIU/L). Results: There was no association between serum TSH levels and EBP after adjusting for sex, age, waist circumference, diabetes mellitus, smoking status, and antihypertensive medication. The odds for increased systolic EBP (odds ratio 1.24, 95% confidence interval 0.88; 1.76) and diastolic EBP (odds ratios 0.98, 95% confidence interval 0.70; 1.39) as well as for exercise-induced increase of systolic and diastolic blood pressure were not significantly different between subjects with high and low serum TSH levels within the reference range. Similar findings were found for both subjects with TSH levels below and above the reference range, respectively. Conclusions: We conclude that serum TSH levels are not associated with exercise-related blood pressure response.

Veröffentlicht in

THYROID


Jahr 2011
Impact Factor (2011) 4,792
Volume 21
Issue 8
Seiten 829 - 835
Open Access nein
Peer reviewed nein
Artikelart Originalartikel
Artikelstatus erschienen - Druck
DOI 10.1089/thy.2010.0277
PubMed-ID 21595557

Allgemeine Daten zur Fachzeitschrift

Kurzbezeichnung: THYROID
ISSN: 1050-7256
eISSN: 1557-9077
Land: USA
Sprache: English
Kategorie(n):
  • PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY


Impact Factor Entwicklung

Jahr Impact Factor
2008 3
2009 2,602
2010 4,327
2011 4,792
2012 3,544
2013 3,843
2014 4,493
2015 3,784
2016 5,515
2017 7,557
2018 7,786
2019 5,227
2020 6,568
2021 6,506
2022 6,6
2023 5,8
2024 6,7

Beteiligte Departments

Community Medicine

Projekte

GANI_MED Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (Projektverbund)

FAQs | Impressum | Datenschutz