TY - JOUR
T1 - Prognostic Significance of Home and Ambulatory Blood Pressure
T2 - Summary of Longitudinal Evidence from the Ohasama Study
AU - Ohkubo, Takayoshi
AU - Satoh, Michihiro
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Tohoku University Medical Press.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - The Ohasama Study is a long-term prospective cohort study of the general population in the town of Ohasama (currently, Hanamaki city) in Iwate Prefecture, Japan, that was started in 1986. Ohasama is a typical farming village in the Tohoku region that consists of part-time farming households that cultivate mainly fruit trees. At the start of the study, the prevention of hypertension, a main cause of strokes, was taken to be an important issue in public health activities because of the many people who died or needed care as a result of strokes in Ohasama. A home blood pressure measurement program was then begun with the aim of preventing hypertension while increasing a sense of solidarity among community residents and the awareness that “one must protect one’s own health.” As a result, this project became the world’s first community-based epidemiological study using home blood pressure, as well as 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure, for which measurements were also initiated. In the 1990s, the Ohasama Study reported a linear “the lower, the better” relationship between out-of-office blood pressure and cardiovascular risk. To date, we have accumulated advanced evidence regarding the clinical significance of out-of-office blood pressure. Those have contributed to hypertension management guidelines around the world. This article summarizes the results of representative long-term follow-up studies of the Ohasama Study.
AB - The Ohasama Study is a long-term prospective cohort study of the general population in the town of Ohasama (currently, Hanamaki city) in Iwate Prefecture, Japan, that was started in 1986. Ohasama is a typical farming village in the Tohoku region that consists of part-time farming households that cultivate mainly fruit trees. At the start of the study, the prevention of hypertension, a main cause of strokes, was taken to be an important issue in public health activities because of the many people who died or needed care as a result of strokes in Ohasama. A home blood pressure measurement program was then begun with the aim of preventing hypertension while increasing a sense of solidarity among community residents and the awareness that “one must protect one’s own health.” As a result, this project became the world’s first community-based epidemiological study using home blood pressure, as well as 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure, for which measurements were also initiated. In the 1990s, the Ohasama Study reported a linear “the lower, the better” relationship between out-of-office blood pressure and cardiovascular risk. To date, we have accumulated advanced evidence regarding the clinical significance of out-of-office blood pressure. Those have contributed to hypertension management guidelines around the world. This article summarizes the results of representative long-term follow-up studies of the Ohasama Study.
KW - ambulatory
KW - blood pressure monitoring
KW - epidemiology
KW - home blood pressure
KW - review Tohoku
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85167842004&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1620/tjem.2023.J045
DO - 10.1620/tjem.2023.J045
M3 - 総説
C2 - 37286522
AN - SCOPUS:85167842004
SN - 0040-8727
VL - 260
SP - 273
EP - 282
JO - Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
JF - Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
IS - 4
ER -