...
首页> 外文期刊>Hypertension: An Official Journal of the American Heart Association >Increased Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity Is Associated With Silent Cerebral Small-Vessel Disease in Hypertensive Patients
【24h】

Increased Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity Is Associated With Silent Cerebral Small-Vessel Disease in Hypertensive Patients

机译:高血压患者主动脉脉搏波速度增加与无症状性脑小血管疾病相关

获取原文

摘要

Aortic stiffness predicts an excess risk of stroke, supposedly via cerebral small-vessel disease. White matter hyperintensities, silent lacunar infarcts, and brain microbleeds, manifestations of cerebral small-vessel disease on neuroimaging, may precede overt cerebrovascular disease. Therefore, we assessed whether aortic stiffness is also related to such lesions. In 167 hypertensive patients (85 men) without a history of cardiovascular or cerebrovascular disease, a mean age of 51.8±13.1 years, and untreated office blood pressure levels of 169±25/104±12 mm Hg, we determined aortic pulse wave velocity and office and ambulatory 24-hour pulse pressure (off medication), as well as the volume of white matter hyperintensities and the presence of lacunar infarcts and microbleeds using brain MRI. Linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the relationships between the arterial stiffness measures and brain lesions. Aortic stiffness and pulse pressure were significantly related to each of the brain lesions in univariate analyses ( P <0.05). Multivariate analyses, adjusted for age, sex, brain volume, mean arterial pressure, and heart rate, showed that a higher pulse wave velocity was significantly associated with a greater volume of white matter hyperintensities (unstandardized regression coefficient: 0.041; 95% CI: 0.005 to 0.078; P <0.05) and the presence of lacunar infarcts (odds ratio [per SD increase in pulse wave velocity]: 1.78; 95% CI: 1.06 to 2.99; P <0.05) but not with microbleeds. The models for pulse pressure failed to reach statistical significance in multivariate analyses. In conclusion, aortic stiffness is independently associated with manifestations of cerebral small-vessel disease in hypertensive patients, linking systemic large- to cerebral small-artery disease.
机译:主动脉僵硬预示着中风的风险增加,据推测是由于脑小血管疾病引起的。白质高信号,无症状的腔隙性梗塞和脑微出血(在神经影像学上表现为脑小血管疾病的表现)可能先于明显的脑血管疾病。因此,我们评估了主动脉僵硬度是否也与此类病变有关。在167名无心血管或脑血管疾病史,平均年龄51.8±13.1岁,未经治疗的办公室血压水平为169±25/104±12 mm Hg的高血压患者(85名男性)中,我们确定了主动脉脉搏波速度和办公室和门诊24小时脉压(停药),以及使用脑部MRI进行白质高血容量以及腔隙性梗塞和微出血的存在。进行线性和逻辑回归分析,以评估动脉僵硬度测量值与脑部病变之间的关系。在单因素分析中,主动脉僵硬度和脉压与每个脑部病变均显着相关(P <0.05)。对年龄,性别,脑容量,平均动脉压和心率进行调整后的多变量分析显示,脉搏波速度越高与白质血脂过多的数量越显着相关(非标准化回归系数:0.041; 95%CI) :0.005至0.078; P <0.05)和腔隙性梗塞的存在(赔率[每SD脉搏波速度增加]:1.78; 95%CI:1.06至2.99; P <0.05),但无微出血。在多变量分析中,脉压模型未能达到统计学意义。总之,主动脉僵硬与高血压患者脑小血管疾病的表现独立相关,将全身性大动脉与脑小动脉疾病联系在一起。

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号