In hypertensive patients, education level, body mass index, and muscle strength were significantly associated with the functional capacity domain of quality of life (p < 0.05).
Cross-Sectional (n=45)
In hypertensive patients, factors such as education level, body mass index, muscle strength, and systolic blood pressure are significantly associated with various domains of health-related quality of life.
valor p: p=<0.05
Background Hypertensive patients present, in addition to worse cardiovascular health, lower health-related quality of life compared to normotensive subjects. Factors such as functional capacity, functional status, pain, participation in social activities, mental and emotional health, fatigue and energy level, along with perception of general health, seem to be relevant for evaluation in this population. However, evidence is unclear in hypertensive patients. Objective To analyze the factors associated with quality of life in hypertensive patients. Methods Forty-five patients were recruited. The dependent variables of the present study are the quality of life domains. Demographic data and clinical conditions were considered independent variables. The Medical Outcomes Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) questionnaire was used to measure quality of life. Handgrip strength, blood pressure and anthropometric indicators were evaluated. Crude and adjusted linear regression analysis was used. Results It was verified that education level, body mass index and muscle strength were associated with the functional capacity domain (p < 0,05), whereas systolic blood pressure was associated with the physical domain (p < 0,05). Women presented lower quality of life on the pain domain compared to men and educational level was associated with the social domain (p < 0,05). Conclusion Hypertensive patients with lower levels of body mass index, higher levels of education and muscle strength presented a better quality of life on the physical domain, while the social aspects presented a positive relationship with education level. Women presented a worse quality of life on the pain domain compared to men. (Int J Cardiovasc Sci. 2020; 33(2):133-142)
Armando da Rocha Nogueira (Wed,) conducted a cross-sectional in Systemic Arterial Hypertension (n=45). Demographic and clinical conditions (education, BMI, muscle strength, blood pressure) was evaluated on Quality of life domains measured by SF-36 (p=<0.05). In hypertensive patients, education level, body mass index, and muscle strength were significantly associated with the functional capacity domain of quality of life (p < 0.05).
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