4.8 Article

Utility of estimated pulse wave velocity for assessing vascular stiffness: comparison of methods

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.73428

Keywords

hypertension-mediated organ damage; aging; hemodynamics; prevention; pulse wave velocity; Human

Categories

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Economy and Technology [50WB1816]
  2. Austrian Federal Ministry for Climate Action, Environment, Energy, Mobility, Innovation and Technology [866761]

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This study investigates the application and accuracy of pulse wave velocity (PWV) in master athletes. The results show that estimated PWV is mainly correlated with age and does not accurately reflect the true vascular condition, thus unable to detect the beneficial effects of lifelong exercise on vascular health.
Background: Pulse wave velocity (PWV) independently predicts cardiovascular risk. Easy to use single-cuff oscillometric methods are utilized in clinical practice to estimate PWV. We applied the approach in master athletes to assess possible beneficial effects of lifelong exercise on vascular health. Furthermore, we compared single-cuff measurements with a two-cuff method in another cohort. Methods: We obtained single-cuff upper arm oscillometric measurements thrice in 129 master athletes aged 35-86 years and estimated PWV using the ArcSolver algorithm. We applied the same method in 24 healthy persons aged 24-55 years participating in a head down tilt bedrest study. In the latter group, we also obtained direct PWV measurements using a thigh cuff. Results: Estimated pulse velocity very highly correlated with age (R-2 = 0.90) in master athletes. Estimated PWV values were located on the same regression line like values obtained in participants of the head down tilt bed rest study. The modest correlation between estimated and measured PWV (R-2 0.40; p < 0.05) was attenuated after adjusting for age; the mean difference between PWV measurements was 1 m/s. Conclusions: Estimated PWV mainly reflects the entered age rather than true vascular properties and, therefore, failed detecting beneficial effects of lifelong exercise.

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