4.5 Article

Differences in longitudinal associations of cardiovascular risk factors with arterial stiffness and pressure wave reflection in middle-aged Japanese men

Journal

HYPERTENSION RESEARCH
Volume 44, Issue 1, Pages 98-106

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41440-020-0523-0

Keywords

Arterial stiffness; Pressure wave reflection; Risk factors

Funding

  1. Omron Health Care Company (Kyoto, Japan)
  2. Asahi Calpis Wellness Company (Tokyo, Japan)
  3. Teijin Pharma Company (Tokyo, Japan)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This prospective observational study examined the longitudinal associations of conventional cardiovascular disease risk factors with arterial stiffness and abnormal pressure wave reflection. High blood pressure was independently associated with both arterial stiffness and abnormal pressure wave reflection, suggesting a link between blood pressure and microvascular damage. Abnormal glucose metabolism and dyslipidemia were only independently associated with arterial stiffness, indicating a connection to macrovascular damage.
The present prospective observational study was conducted to examine the differences in longitudinal associations of the conventional risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) with arterial stiffness and with abnormal pressure wave reflection using repeated measurement data. In 4016 healthy middle-aged (43 +/- 9 years) Japanese men without CVD at baseline, the conventional risk factors for CVD, brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (brachial-ankle PWV) and radial augmentation index (rAI) were measured annually over a 9-year period. Mixed-model linear regression analysis demonstrated a significant independent positive longitudinal association of the mean blood pressure with both the brachial-ankle PWV (estimate = 5.51, standard error = 0.30,P < 0.01) and the rAI (estimate = 0.19, standard error = 0.02,P < 0.01). On the other hand, the serum levels of glycohemoglobin, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides showed longitudinal associations only with the brachial-ankle PWV and not the rAI. In addition, while the radial AI was found to show a significant longitudinal association with the brachial-ankle PWV, the inverse association was not significant. In conclusion, the conventional risk factors for CVD showed heterogeneous longitudinal associations with arterial stiffness and/or abnormal pressure wave reflection. Elevated blood pressure showed independent longitudinal associations with both arterial stiffness (macrovascular damage) and abnormal pressure wave reflection, suggesting that BP is also longitudinally associated, at least in part, with microvascular damage. On the other hand, abnormal glucose metabolism and dyslipidemia showed independent longitudinal associations with only arterial stiffness (macrovascular damage).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available