1. Relationship of Age With the Hemodynamic Parameters in Individuals With Elevated Blood Pressure.
- Author
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Mahajan, Shiwani, Gu, Jianlei, Caraballo, Cesar, Lu, Yuan, Spatz, Erica S., Zhao, Hongyu, Zhang, MaoZhen, Sun, NingLing, Zheng, Xin, Lu, Hui, Yuan, Hong, Ma, Zheng J., and Krumholz, Harlan M.
- Subjects
AGE distribution ,CARDIOGRAPHY ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEMODYNAMICS ,HYPERTENSION ,CROSS-sectional method ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
BACKGROUND Age is known to be associated with the prevalence and pathophysiology of hypertension. However, there is little information on whether age stands as a good proxy for the specific hemodynamic profile of an individual with elevated blood pressure (BP), which could be important in the selection of therapy. DESIGN This is a cross‐sectional study. SETTING People who underwent a noninvasive, hemodynamic assessment using impedance cardiography at 51 sites of iKang Health Checkup Centers throughout China between January 2012 and October 2018. PARTICIPANTS We included 116,851 individuals, aged 20 to 80 years. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES Relationship between age and hemodynamic parameters (cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance index [SVRI]), among individuals with elevated BP (systolic BP ≥130 mm Hg or diastolic BP ≥80 mm Hg). RESULTS: Final study population included 45,082 individuals with elevated BP: 29,194 men and 15,888 women with a mean (±SD) age of 48 (±13) and 54 (±12) years, respectively. Cardiac index was negatively associated with age with an adjusted, per decade decrease of 0.17 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.17‐0.18) L/min/m2 in men and 0.24 (95% CI = 0.23‐0.25) L/min/m2 in women. SVRI was positively associated with age with an adjusted, per‐decade increase of 174.2 (95% CI = 168.8‐179.7) dynes·s·cm−5·m2 in men and 214.1 (95% CI = 204.3‐223.8) dynes·s·cm−5·m2 in women. However, there was substantial overlap in the distribution of these parameters across different age groups in both sexes. CONCLUSIONS: In this large study, we observed that cardiac index decreased and SVRI increased with age among individuals with elevated BP. Even though there was a general trend with age, we observed heterogeneity within age strata, suggesting that age alone is inadequate to indicate the hemodynamic profile for an individual. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:1520‐1528, 2020. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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