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Hunter-gatherers and horticulturalist lifestyle linked to lower blood pressure increases, atherosclerosis risks

Date:
May 21, 2012
Source:
American Heart Association
Summary:
Traditional "hunter-gatherer" and "horticulturalist" populations have significantly lower age-related increases in blood pressure and less risks of atherosclerosis than "modernized" populations. Lifestyle factors of these traditional populations -- high physical activity and high fruit and vegetable diets -- may protect against normal aging phenomena, high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries. Hunter-gatherers and forager-horticulturalists who live off the land and grow what they need to survive have lower age-related increases in blood pressure and less risks of atherosclerosis
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Traditional "hunter-gatherer" and "horticulturalist" populations have significantly lower age-related increases in blood pressure and less risks of atherosclerosis than "modernized" populations. Lifestyle factors of these traditional populations -- high physical activity and high fruit and vegetable diets -- may protect against normal aging phenomena, high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries.

Hunter-gatherers and forager-horticulturalists who live off the land and grow what they need to survive have lower age-related increases in blood pressure and less risks of atherosclerosis, according to two new studies in the American Heart Association journal Hypertension.

High blood pressure and atherosclerosis -- a disease in which arteries stiffen and fill with plaque -- increase with age in the United States and other countries, raising risks for heart attack, stroke, kidney disease and death. Age-related increases in blood pressure have been observed in almost every population, except among hunters-gatherers, farmers and pastoralists.

"Surprisingly, heart disease and stroke aren't necessarily inevitable with age," said Michael Gurven, Ph.D., study author and anthropology professor and chairman of the University of California-Santa Barbara's Integrative Anthropological Sciences Unit.

Gurven's team followed 2,296 indigenous adults in 82 Tsimane villages, an area in the tropical lowlands of Bolivia's Amazon basin. Tsimane are lowland forager-horticulturalists (pop. ~11,000) subsisting on plantains, rice, corn, manioc, fish and hunted game.

"The Tsimane living conditions are similar to those of our ancestors, with greater exposure to pathogens, active lifestyle, high fertility and traditional diet. Studying chronic diseases in these populations can be very insightful," Gurven said.

Researchers found:

  • Per decade, Tsimane women had a systolic blood pressure increase of 2.86 millimeter of mercury (mm Hg) and a diastolic blood pressure increase of 0.95 mm Hg.
  • Per decade, Tsimane men had a systolic blood pressure increase of 0.91 mm Hg and a diastolic blood pressure decrease of 0.02 mm Hg.
  • About 3 percent of Tsimane adults have high blood pressure, compared to 33.5 percent of U.S. adults.

Among Americans over age 40, systolic pressure increases by about 7 mm Hg per decade.

Around the world, 52 other societies have blood pressure two to eight times higher than the Tsimane. Americans' blood pressures are two to four times higher.

"Our classic risk factors such as high blood pressure are not universal," Gurven said. "Nor does all modernization automatically lead to poorer health, contrary to popular beliefs. While overall blood pressure was somewhat higher with more exposure to modernization, there was no evidence of a greater increase in blood pressure with age."

Between July 2002 and December 2010, researchers measured participants' blood pressure one to eight times during multiple physical exams in the Tsimane villages.

Degree of modernization was based on village distance to the nearest town, smoking status, Spanish fluency and education level.

Gurven also noted that prior research done in 2009 published in PLoS ONE showed no evidence of subclinical atherosclerosis in Tsimane adults.

In a smaller study, researchers compared the risks of atherosclerosis in traditional Pygmies -- subsistence hunters-gatherers living in the equatorial forests of Cameroon -- to two neighboring groups: semi-urbanized Pygmies and farmers known as the Bantou.

The researchers gauged atherosclerosis risks based on the elasticity of the participants' arteries, using two markers: pulse wave velocity, a direct measure of arterial stiffening; and aortic augmentation index, an indirect measure of atherosclerosis.

  • Atherosclerosis risks were about 20 percent lower among traditional Pygmies than that of the other two groups.
  • Pulse wave velocity for traditional Pygmies was 5.8 meters/second, 6.82 meters/second for contemporary Pygmies and 6.93 meters/second for Bantou farmers.
  • The augmentation index for the three groups weren't different, but the traditional Pygmies' shorter height suggests their atherosclerosis risks are lower than the others.

"Our study shows that the effect of aging on atherosclerosis is blunted by a traditional lifestyle," said Daniel Lemogoum, M.D., M.P.H., study lead author and cardiologist at the Hypertension Clinic at Hôpital Erasme of the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Brussels, Belgium.

In clinical exams, the Belgium researchers measured 62 adults' blood pressure, heart rate, weight, height, body mass index, pulse wave velocity and augmentation index. They calculated effects of factors including blood pressure and age.

"By focusing our attention on people with very different lifestyles from our own, we might better be able to understand that maintaining heart health is possible even as we age," Lemogoum said.

Lifestyle factors specific to hunters-gatherers might explain the minimal increases in blood pressure in the Tsimane and low atherosclerosis risks in the traditional Pygmies, the study authors said. The factors include: high physical activity, low stress levels and potentially protective diets high in fruits, vegetables and potassium and low in calories, salt and alcohol.

Gurven's co-authors are: Aaron Blackwell, Ph.D.; Daniel Eid Rodriguez, M.D.; Jonathan Stieglitz, Ph.D.; and Hillard Kaplan, Ph.D.

Lemogoum's co-authors are: William Ngatchou, M.D.; Christophe Janssen, M.D.; Marc Leeman, M.D., Ph.D.; Luc Van Bortel, M.D., Ph.D.; Pierre Boutouyrie, M.D., Ph.D.; Jean Paul Degaute, M.D., Ph.D.; and Philippe Van de Borne, M.D., Ph.D.

The National Institute on Aging funded the Tsimane study and the French Foundation for Research on Arterial Hypertension funded the Cameroon study.


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Materials provided by American Heart Association. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal References:

  1. Michael Gurven, Aaron D. Blackwell, Daniel Eid Rodríguez, Jonathan Stieglitz, and Hillard Kaplan. Does Blood Pressure Inevitably Rise With Age? Longitudinal Evidence Among Forager-Horticulturalists. Hypertension, 2012 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.189100
  2. Daniel Lemogoum, William Ngatchou, Christophe Janssen, Marc Leeman, Luc Van Bortel, Pierre Boutouyrie, Jean Paul Degaute, and Philippe Van de Borne. Effects of Hunter-Gatherer Subsistence Mode on Arterial Distensibility in Cameroonian Pygmies. Hypertension, May 21 2012 DOI: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.111.187757

Cite This Page:

American Heart Association. "Hunter-gatherers and horticulturalist lifestyle linked to lower blood pressure increases, atherosclerosis risks." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 21 May 2012. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/05/120521163621.htm>.
American Heart Association. (2012, May 21). Hunter-gatherers and horticulturalist lifestyle linked to lower blood pressure increases, atherosclerosis risks. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 29, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/05/120521163621.htm
American Heart Association. "Hunter-gatherers and horticulturalist lifestyle linked to lower blood pressure increases, atherosclerosis risks." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/05/120521163621.htm (accessed March 29, 2024).

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