Back to Search Start Over

Conventional and ambulatory blood pressure as predictors of diastolic left ventricular function in a Flemish population

Authors :
Wei, F.-F. (Fang-Fei)
Yang, W.-Y. (Wen-Yi)
Thijs, L. (Lutgarde)
Zhang, Z.-Y. (Zhen-Yu)
Cauwenberghs, N. (Nicholas)
Van Keer, J. (Jan)
Huang, Q.-F. (Qi-Fang)
Mujaj, B. (Blerim)
Kuznetsova, T. (Tatiana)
Allegaert, K.M. (Karel)
Verhamme, P. (Peter)
Staessen, J.A. (Jan A.)
Wei, F.-F. (Fang-Fei)
Yang, W.-Y. (Wen-Yi)
Thijs, L. (Lutgarde)
Zhang, Z.-Y. (Zhen-Yu)
Cauwenberghs, N. (Nicholas)
Van Keer, J. (Jan)
Huang, Q.-F. (Qi-Fang)
Mujaj, B. (Blerim)
Kuznetsova, T. (Tatiana)
Allegaert, K.M. (Karel)
Verhamme, P. (Peter)
Staessen, J.A. (Jan A.)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Background--No longitudinal study compared associations of echocardiographic indexes of diastolic left ventricular function studies with conventional (CBP) and daytime ambulatory (ABP) blood pressure in the general population. Methods and Results--In 780 Flemish (mean age, 50.2 years; 51.7% women), we measured left atrial volume index (LAVI), peak velocities of the transmitral blood flow (E) and mitral annular movement (e0) in early diastole and E/e0 9.6 years (median) after CBP and ABP. In adjusted models including CBP and ABP, we expressed associations per 10/5-mm Hg systolic/diastolic blood pressure increments. LAVI and E/e0 were 0.65/0.40 mL/m2 and 0.17/0.09 greater with higher systolic/diastolic ABP (P≤0.028), but not with higher baseline CBP (P≤0.086). e0 was lower (P≤0.032) with higher diastolic CBP (-0.09 cm/s) and ABP (-0.19 cm/s). When we substituted baseline CBP by CBP recorded concurrently with echocardiography, LAVI and E/e0 remained 0.45/0.38 mL/m2 and 0.15/0.08 greater with baseline ABP (P≤0.036), while LAVI (+0.53 mL/m2) and E/e0 (+0.19) were also greater (P < 0.001) in relation to concurrent systolic CBP. In categorized analyses of baseline data, sustained hypertension or masked hypertension compared with normotension or white-c

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, Journal of the American Heart Association vol. 7 no. 4, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1084617514
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161.JAHA.117.007868