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. 2012 Jul 2;11:44. doi: 10.1186/1476-069X-11-44

Table 4.

Odds for hypertension among Inuit§(30–69 years) in Greenland vs. quintiles of whole blood mercury. The analyses are adjusted for confoundersab

 
Hypertension (1 = hypertension, 0 = no hypertension)c
Whole blood mercury (μg/L) Odds ratio (95% CI) Pd (Pe)
Men
 
 
Quintile 1 (range: 0.4-8.7)
1
(0.22)
Quintile 2 (range: 8.8-17.0)
1.04 (0.62-1.73)
0.88
Quintile 3 (range: 17.3-26.1)
0.65 (0.37-1.15)
0.14
Quintile 4 (range: 27.0-49.0)
0.84 (0.45-1.57)
0.59
Quintile 5 (range: 50.0-280.0)
0.53 (0.26-1.10)
0.09
Women
 
 
Quintile 1 (range: 0.05-6.4)
1
(0.60)
Quintile 2 (range: 6.6-12.0)
1.29 (0.77-2.18)
0.34
Quintile 3 (range: 12.2-20.1)
1.09 (0.63-1.89)
0,75
Quintile 4 (range: 21.0-35.0)
1.51 (0.85-2.69)
0.16
Quintile 5 (range: 36.0-170.0) 1.39 (0.72-2.70) 0.33

§ Only participants with four Greenlandic grandparents.

a Confounders: age, smoking habits, blood selenium, ratio of n-3/n-6 fatty acids, waist circumference.

b The models were based on 663 men and 889 women (with non-missing values for all included variables).

c Hypertension was defined as BP ≥ 140/90 mmHg or usage of anti-hypertensive drugs.

d P-value of a “pairwise” comparison with the first quintile of whole blood mercury.

e P-value of a Wald test for the overall effect of whole blood mercury on hypertension.