KUMJ | VOL. 23 | NO. 2 | ISSUE 90 | APRIL - JUNE, 2025
Serum Uric Acid and its Correlation with Inflammation in Hypertension, a Hospital Based Case-control Study
Baskota D, Bhattarai N
Abstract: Background
Our lifestyle has a significant impact on levels of serum uric acid. We have attempted
to correlate the patients’ uric acid levels with predictors of inflammation, such as
CRP, obesity and dyslipidemia among hypertensive cases.
Objective
To investigate the association of uric acid with systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood
pressure, body mass index and waist circumference in essential hypertension. To
correlate uric acid with C-reactive protein, fasting blood sugar, serum creatinine,
triglycerides, high densityhigh-density lipoprotein- cholesterol andcholesterol and
total cholesterol.
Method
This hospital-based case-control study included 280 participants and 150 were
hypertensive cases and 130 were normotensive controls. Anthropometric
measurements including waist circumference and blood pressure were taken.
Body mass index was calculated from height and weight. Blood was collected for
total cholesterol, triglyceride, C-reactive protein, high density lipoprotein, uric
acid, creatinine and fasting blood sugar. Data were analyzed using SPSS 24, with
associations examined through Spearman’s rho correlation, interquartile range and
median. Categorical variables each were compared between groups using χ2 test.
Result
The predictors of inflammation like waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood
pressure, body mass index, uric acid and triglyceride were significantly high among
hypertensives; (p=0.000). High density lipoprotein was low among hypertensives
(p=0.000). Uric acid showed significant positive correlation with waist circumference
in females (p=0.000), but not in males. Body mass index, systolic and diastolic blood
pressure, C-reactive protein, triglyceride and low high density lipoprotein, showed
significant positive correlation with uric acid ; (p=0.000). A significant positive
correlation of uric acid was seen with creatinine, (p=0.005). Fasting blood sugar and
Total cholesterol failed to show any association with uric acid.
Conclusion
This study demonstrated that there is a strong correlation between serum uric acid
and the metabolic predictors of inflammation, such as hypertension, C-reactive
protein, triglyceride, low high density lipoprotein, high body mass index, high waist
circumference, and serum creatinine, as shown by other studies that imply the
interplay between metabolic disorders and inflammation.
Keyword : C-reactive protein, Dyslipidemia, Hypertension, Inflammation, Uric acid