Longitudinal Trajectories of Arterial Stiffness and the Role of Blood Pressure

Author:

AlGhatrif Majd1,Strait James B.1,Morrell Chris H.1,Canepa Marco1,Wright Jeanette1,Elango Palchamy1,Scuteri Angelo1,Najjar Samer S.1,Ferrucci Luigi1,Lakatta Edward G.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science (M.A., J.B.S., C.H.M., M.C., J.W., A.S., E.G.L.), Longitudinal Studies Section (P.E., L.F.), National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, MD; Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD (M.A.); Hospital San Raffaele Pisana IRCCS, Rome, Italy (A.S.); Division of Cardiology, MedStar Research Institute, Washington, DC (S.S.N.); and Division of Cardiology, University of Genova, Italy (M.C.).

Abstract

Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV), a marker of arterial stiffness, is an established independent cardiovascular risk factor. Little information is available on the pattern and determinants of the longitudinal change in PWV with aging. Such information is crucial to elucidating mechanisms underlying arterial stiffness and the design of interventions to retard it. Between 1988 and 2013, we collected 2 to 9 serial measures of PWV in 354 men and 423 women of the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging, who were 21 to 94 years of age and free of clinically significant cardiovascular disease. Rates of PWV increase accelerated with advancing age in men more than women, leading to sex differences in PWV after the age of 50 years. In both sexes, not only systolic blood pressure (SBP) ≥140 mm Hg but also SBP of 120 to 139 mm Hg was associated with steeper rates of PWV increase compared with SBP<120 mm Hg. Furthermore, there was a dose-dependent effect of SBP in men with marked acceleration in PWV rate of increase with age at SBP ≥140 mm Hg compared with SBP of 120 to 139 mm Hg. Except for waist circumference in women, no other traditional cardiovascular risk factors predicted longitudinal PWV increase. In conclusion, the steeper longitudinal increase of PWV in men than women led to the sex difference that expanded with advancing age. Age and SBP are the main longitudinal determinants of PWV, and the effect of SBP on PWV trajectories exists even in the prehypertensive range.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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