학술논문

Interrelations Between Arterial Stiffness, Target Organ Damage, and Cardiovascular Disease Outcomes
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of the American Heart Association. 8(14)
Subject
Cardiovascular
Clinical Research
Aging
Heart Disease
Adult
Aged
Albuminuria
Angina Pectoris
Angina
Unstable
Arterial Pressure
Cardiovascular Diseases
Carotid-Femoral Pulse Wave Velocity
Cohort Studies
Echocardiography
Female
Heart Failure
Humans
Hypertrophy
Left Ventricular
Incidence
Intermittent Claudication
Ischemic Attack
Transient
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Manometry
Middle Aged
Myocardial Infarction
Prospective Studies
Stroke
Vascular Stiffness
arterial stiffness
cardiovascular disease
epidemiology
pulse wave velocity
target organ damage
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Language
Abstract
Background Excess transmission of pressure pulsatility caused by increased arterial stiffness may incur microcirculatory damage in end organs (target organ damage [TOD] ) and, in turn, elevate risk for cardiovascular disease ( CVD ) events. Methods and Results We related arterial stiffness measures (carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity, mean arterial pressure, central pulse pressure) to the prevalence and incidence of TOD (defined as albuminuria and/or echocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy) in up to 6203 Framingham Study participants (mean age 50±15 years, 54% women). We then related presence of TOD to incident CVD in multivariable Cox regression models without and with adjustment for arterial stiffness measures. Cross-sectionally, greater arterial stiffness was associated with a higher prevalence of TOD (adjusted odds ratios ranging from 1.23 to 1.54 per SD increment in arterial stiffness measure, P