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Pulse wave velocity as marker of preclinical arterial disease: reference levels in a uruguayan population considering wave detection algorithms, path lengths, aging, and blood pressure.

Authors :
Farro I
Bia D
Zócalo Y
Torrado J
Farro F
Florio L
Olascoaga A
Alallón W
Lluberas R
Armentano RL
Source :
International journal of hypertension [Int J Hypertens] 2012; Vol. 2012, pp. 169359. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 May 16.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWV) has emerged as the gold standard for non-invasive evaluation of aortic stiffness; absence of standardized methodologies of study and lack of normal and reference values have limited a wider clinical implementation. This work was carried out in a Uruguayan (South American) population in order to characterize normal, reference, and threshold levels of PWV considering normal age-related changes in PWV and the prevailing blood pressure level during the study. A conservative approach was used, and we excluded symptomatic subjects; subjects with history of cardiovascular (CV) disease, diabetes mellitus or renal failure; subjects with traditional CV risk factors (other than age and gender); asymptomatic subjects with atherosclerotic plaques in carotid arteries; patients taking anti-hypertensives or lipid-lowering medications. The included subjects (n = 429) were categorized according to the age decade and the blood pressure levels (at study time). All subjects represented the "reference population"; the group of subjects with optimal/normal blood pressures levels at study time represented the "normal population." Results. Normal and reference PWV levels were obtained. Differences in PWV levels and aging-associated changes were obtained. The obtained data could be used to define vascular aging and abnormal or disease-related arterial changes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2090-0392
Volume :
2012
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of hypertension
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22666551
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/169359