Little brothers raise your blood pressure

By Tia Ghose, LiveScience 

Having a younger brother isn't just a drag in childhood, it may also raise your blood pressure into adulthood, suggests a new study on Bolivian adults.

The effect, detailed this month in the journal Economics and Human Biology, is only correlational and so the scientists can't say whether one causes the other. But they do offer a mechanism, suggesting that in this region, a younger sibling — particularly a younger brother — takes parental attention from older children while burdening the older kids with extra responsibility.

"If there are more siblings in the family, the parents' resources are limited. The older brother will see the younger brother as a competitor and it will kind of stress them out," Zeng said.

In wealthy, developed countries, the same link would likely not hold and may even go in the opposite direction, other research has suggested. [ 10 Scientific Tips for Raising Happy Kids ]

It's been well documented that birth order can affect personality, sexual maturation and several economic outcomes. In a previous study, Zeng's team found that adults with younger siblings tended to have higher total cholesterol than other children.

To see whether blood pressure was affected, too, Zeng and his colleagues measured the blood pressure of 374 adults living in 13 Bolivian villages in the Amazon. Many came from large broods of six or seven children, so the group included a mix of younger, older and middle children.

Younger brothers seemed to bring the biggest health risk: Those adults with younger brothers had blood pressures up to 6 percent higher than others in the study. Younger sisters were also a problem, but only for older girls, whose blood pressure increased by 3.8 percent for each younger sister.

But the blood pressure spike probably wasn't caused by sibling spats or by younger brothers' behaviors. Rather, having younger kids in the family may have drained parental attention. And looking out for the younger siblings requires a lot of work from elder children.

"In that area the older brothers have responsibility to help the younger brothers to find a job in the future or to find a wife or girlfriend," Zeng told LiveScience.

Perhaps because males are preferred over females in the region, baby sisters require fewer resources than baby brothers and so weren't tied to a jump in blood pressure as much, Zeng said.

Luckily, the stress of younger siblings wanes as people age.

"When people get older, they're not living with their brothers or sisters anymore," he said. They have more control over their lives and fewer burdens from younger sibs, he added.

People in developed countries can't blame younger brothers for their soaring blood pressure. With fewer siblings, many more resources, and fewer responsibilities to younger brothers, siblings in rich countries may actually lower blood pressure, according to a 1991 study in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Instead, Americans can thank their sedentary, calorie-rich lifestyle for high blood pressure, Zeng said.

More from LiveScience:

More from NBCNews.com: 

Sorry kid, firstborns really are smarter

Are you a middle child? Authors explore your 'secret power'

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Discuss this post

I have one brother. Sure glad he's older than me.

    Reply#1 - Mon Nov 19, 2012 3:59 PM EST

    I have a younger brother who dropped out of high school with only 3 months remaining, failed to get a GED while in the Army, declined an offer to obtain computer training while in the Army and now changes jobs every other year. He only calls me when he needs money. Why should this affect my BP?

    • 2 votes
    Reply#2 - Mon Nov 19, 2012 4:25 PM EST

    I have 3 little brothers. Shockingly, my blood pressure is normal but I also live 2000 miles away from them. :)

    • 1 vote
    Reply#3 - Mon Nov 19, 2012 6:03 PM EST

    Hey, wait a minute, I am the youngest brother and all my older siblings have perfect blood pressure and I have the high blood pressure! They live in my house for free and they utilize my facilities to run their business, for free. I guess they figured this out and decided to turn the tables on me! They are smarter than I thought.

      Reply#4 - Mon Nov 19, 2012 6:24 PM EST

      I thought Bolivia with all of the political bullcrap there (Coups, Juntas, Dictators, crooked Presidentes) jacks one's BP through the roof - little brothers or no little brothers....

        Reply#5 - Fri Nov 23, 2012 12:08 PM EST
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