4.2 Article

Subendocardial Viability Ratio Predictive Value for Cardiovascular Risk in Hypertensive Patients

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MEDICINA-LITHUANIA
卷 59, 期 1, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/medicina59010024

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hypertension; cardiovascular risk factors; arterial stiffness; Framingham score; atherosclerosis; pulse wave velocity; subendocardial viability ratio

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This study found that subendocardial viability ratio (SEVR) is significantly correlated with age, blood pressure, and heart rate, and can be used as an indirect indicator for assessing future cardiovascular risk. Furthermore, SEVR is also significantly correlated with serum fibrinogen and hemoglobin levels, indicating its potential use in evaluating cardiovascular event risk in hypertensive patients.
Background: The subendocardial viability ratio (SEVR), also known as the Buckberg index, is a parameter of arterial stiffness with indirect prognostic value in assessing long-term cardiovascular risk. Materials and Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study on 70 patients with uncomplicated hypertension admitted to a county medical reference hospital. We analyzed demographics, laboratory data, arterial stiffness parameters and cardiovascular risk scores (SCORE and Framingham risk scores) and aimed to identify paraclinical parameters associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Results: Of the arterial stiffness parameters, SEVR correlates statistically significantly with age, central and peripheral systolic blood pressure, as well as with heart rate. SEVR seems to have prognostic value among hypertensive patients by increasing the risk of major cardiovascular events assessed by SCORE and Framingham risk scores. SEVR correlates statistically significantly with serum fibrinogen (p = 0.02) and hemoglobin (p = 0.046). Between pulse wave velocity and lipid parameters (p = 0.021 for low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and p = 0.030 for triglycerides) a statistically significant relationship was found for the study group. The augmentation index of the aorta also correlated with serum LDL-cholesterol (p = 0.032) and the hemoglobin levels (p = 0.040) of hypertensive patients. Conclusions: Age, abdominal circumference and Framingham score are independent predictors for SEVR in our study group, further highlighting the need for early therapeutic measures to control risk factors in this category of patients.

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