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Aortic Stiffness, Pulse Pressure, and Cerebral Pulsatility Progress Despite Best Medical Management: The OXVASC Cohort
- Source :
- Stroke. 53(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Background: Increased cerebral arterial pulsatility is associated with cerebral small vessel disease, recurrent stroke, and dementia despite the best medical treatment. However, no study has identified the rates and determinants of progression of arterial stiffness and pulsatility. Methods: In consecutive patients within 6 weeks of transient ischemic attack or nondisabling stroke (OXVASC [Oxford Vascular Study]), arterial stiffness (pulse wave velocity [PWV]) and aortic systolic, aortic diastolic, and aortic pulse pressures (aoPP) were measured by applanation tonometry (Sphygmocor), while middle cerebral artery (MCA) peak (MCA-PSV) and trough (MCA-EDV) flow velocity and Gosling pulsatility index (PI; MCA-PI) were measured by transcranial ultrasound (transcranial Doppler, DWL Doppler Box). Repeat assessments were performed at the 5-year follow-up visit after intensive medical treatment and agreement determined by intraclass correlation coefficients. Rates of progression and their determinants, stratified by age and sex, were determined by mixed-effects linear models, adjusted for age, sex, and cardiovascular risk factors. Results: In 188 surviving, eligible patients with repeat assessments after a median of 5.8 years. PWV, aoPP, and MCA-PI were highly reproducible (intraclass correlation coefficients, 0.71, 0.59, and 0.65, respectively), with progression of PWV (2.4%; P P P =0.22). However, PWV increased at a faster rate with increasing age (0.009 m/s per y/y; P P P =0.009). Higher aortic systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure predicted a greater rate of progression of PWV and aoPP, but not MCA-PI, although current MCA-PI was particularly strongly associated with concurrent aoPP ( P Conclusions: Arterial pulsatility and aortic stiffness progressed significantly after 55 years of age despite the best medical treatment. Progression of stiffness and aoPP was determined by high blood pressure, but MCA-PI predominantly reflected current aoPP. Treatments targetting cerebral pulsatility may need to principally target aortic stiffness and pulse pressure to have the potential to prevent cerebral small vessel disease.
- Subjects :
- medicine.medical_specialty
Middle Cerebral Artery
Blood Pressure
Disease
Pulse Wave Analysis
Vascular Stiffness
Recurrent stroke
Internal medicine
Geese
medicine
Dementia
Animals
Humans
Advanced and Specialized Nursing
business.industry
Leukoaraiosis
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Pulse pressure
Blood pressure
Cohort
cardiovascular system
Cardiology
Aortic stiffness
Neurology (clinical)
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
business
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15244628
- Volume :
- 53
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Stroke
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....7123e35e6ae163aba60e1a1d184d612f