Volume 28, Issue 6 270126 pp. 333-342
Article
Open Access

Distribution of C-reactive Protein and Its Association with Cardiovascular Risk Factors in a Population-Based Sample of Chinese

Yanfang Zhao

Yanfang Zhao

Department of Health Statistics Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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Rui Wang

Rui Wang

Department of Health Statistics Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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Xiuqiang Ma

Xiuqiang Ma

Department of Health Statistics Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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Xiaoyan Yan

Xiaoyan Yan

Department of Health Statistics Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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Zhansai Zhang

Zhansai Zhang

Institute of Health Inspection Songjiang District Shanghai, China

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Xiang He

Corresponding Author

Xiang He

Health Service Faculty Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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Jia He

Corresponding Author

Jia He

Department of Health Statistics Second Military Medical University Shanghai, China , smmu.edu.cn

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First published: 30 May 2013
Citations: 1

Abstract

C-reactive protein (CRP) levels vary remarkably with ethnic status. Its distribution and correlates should be investigated across diverse populations, and these were limited in a representative Chinese population. We investigated 3133 participants aged 18–80 years in Shanghai, which were sampled using a randomized, stratified, multi-stage sampling method. The distribution of CRP was highly skewed toward a lower level. The median CRP was 0.55 mg/L (0.61 mg/L in males, 0.51 mg/L in females). Participants living in urban region had higher CRP levels than those in rural region (0.67 vs. 0.46 mg/L). CRP levels showed significant correlation with traditional cardiovascular risk factors, and it was most strongly correlated with body mass index. Multivariate logistic regression analyses indicated that elevated CRP (being in the top 15 percentile of CRP; CRP ≥ 2.09 mg/L) was significantly associated with obesity, hypertension, diabetes, low high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high triglycerides and cardiovascular disease history. In conclusion, the distribution of CRP in adult Chinese was comparable with that of many other Asian populations but different from that of Western populations. Metabolic impairment was associated with elevated CRP, and CRP levels should be interpreted in conjunction with the lipid profile.

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