TY - JOUR
T1 - Establishing reference values for central blood pressure and its amplification in a general healthy population and according to cardiovascular risk factors
AU - Arterial Measurements Collaboration
AU - Herbert, Annie
AU - Cruickshank, John Kennedy
AU - Laurent, Stéphane
AU - Boutouyrie, Pierre
AU - Shimada, Kazuyuki
AU - Kario, Kazuomi
AU - Miyashita, Hiroshi
AU - Eguchi, Kazuo
AU - Kohara, Katsuhiko
AU - Tabara, Yasuharu
AU - Imai, Yutaka
AU - Ito, Sadayoshi
AU - Hashimoto, Junichiro
AU - Uchiba, Kiyoshi
AU - Suzuki, Hiromichi
AU - Takenaka, Tsuneo
AU - Takazawa, Kenji
AU - Kino, Mineko
AU - Yamashina, Akira
AU - Tomiyama, Hirofumi
AU - Dohi, Yasuaki
AU - Takase, Hiroyuki
AU - Jouven, Xavier
AU - Empana, Jean Phillipe
AU - Pannier, Bruno
AU - Thomas, Frédérique
AU - Prescott, Eva
AU - Janner, Julie
AU - McEniery, Carmel
AU - Cockcroft, John
AU - Wilkinson, Ian
AU - Roman, Mary J.
AU - Devereux, Richard B.
AU - Teal, Valerie
AU - Townsend, Raymond
AU - Vermeersch, Sebastian
AU - Rietzschel, Ernst R.
AU - Van Bortel, Luc
AU - De Buyzere, Marc L.
AU - Segers, Patrick
AU - Gillebert, Thierry C.
AU - Wang, Ji Guang
AU - Li, Yan
AU - Lazar, Jason
AU - Salciccioli, Louis
AU - Cunha, Pedro
AU - Oliveira, Pedro
AU - Cotter, Jorge
AU - Vila, Isabel
AU - Sousa, Nuno
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology.
PY - 2014/11/21
Y1 - 2014/11/21
N2 - Aims: Estimated central systolic blood pressure (cSBP) and amplification (Brachial SBP-cSBP) are non-invasive measures potentially prognostic of cardiovascular (CV) disease. No worldwide, multiple-device reference values are available. We aimed to establish reference values for a worldwide general population standardizing between the different available methods of measurement. How these values were significantly altered by cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) was then investigated. Methods and results: Existing data from population surveys and clinical trials were combined, whether published or not. Reference values of cSBP and amplification were calculatedas percentiles for 'Normal' (no CVRFs) and 'Reference' (any CVRFs) populations. We included 45 436 subjects out of 82 930 that were gathered from 77 studies of 53 centres. Included subjects were apparently healthy, not treated for hypertension or dyslipidaemia, and free from overt CV disease and diabetes. Values of cSBP and amplification were stratified by brachial blood pressure categories and age decade in turn, both being stratifiedbysex. Amplification decreased with age and more so in males than in females. Sex was the most powerful factor associated with amplification with 6.6 mmHg (5.8-7.4) higher amplification in males than in females. Amplification was marginally but significantly influenced by CVRFs, with smoking and dyslipidaemia decreasing amplification, but increased with increasing levels of blood glucose. Conclusion: Typical values of cSBP and amplification in a healthy population and a population free of traditional CVRFs are now available according to age, sex, and brachial BP, providing values included from different devices with a wide geographical representation. Amplification is significantly influenced by CVRFs, but differently in men and women.
AB - Aims: Estimated central systolic blood pressure (cSBP) and amplification (Brachial SBP-cSBP) are non-invasive measures potentially prognostic of cardiovascular (CV) disease. No worldwide, multiple-device reference values are available. We aimed to establish reference values for a worldwide general population standardizing between the different available methods of measurement. How these values were significantly altered by cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs) was then investigated. Methods and results: Existing data from population surveys and clinical trials were combined, whether published or not. Reference values of cSBP and amplification were calculatedas percentiles for 'Normal' (no CVRFs) and 'Reference' (any CVRFs) populations. We included 45 436 subjects out of 82 930 that were gathered from 77 studies of 53 centres. Included subjects were apparently healthy, not treated for hypertension or dyslipidaemia, and free from overt CV disease and diabetes. Values of cSBP and amplification were stratified by brachial blood pressure categories and age decade in turn, both being stratifiedbysex. Amplification decreased with age and more so in males than in females. Sex was the most powerful factor associated with amplification with 6.6 mmHg (5.8-7.4) higher amplification in males than in females. Amplification was marginally but significantly influenced by CVRFs, with smoking and dyslipidaemia decreasing amplification, but increased with increasing levels of blood glucose. Conclusion: Typical values of cSBP and amplification in a healthy population and a population free of traditional CVRFs are now available according to age, sex, and brachial BP, providing values included from different devices with a wide geographical representation. Amplification is significantly influenced by CVRFs, but differently in men and women.
KW - Adult
KW - Aged
KW - Aorta
KW - Arteries
KW - Arteriosclerosis
KW - Blood pressure
KW - Central pressure
KW - Humans
KW - Pulse
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U2 - 10.1093/eurheartj/ehu293
DO - 10.1093/eurheartj/ehu293
M3 - Article
C2 - 25112663
AN - SCOPUS:84913589999
VL - 35
SP - 3122
EP - 3133
JO - European Heart Journal
JF - European Heart Journal
SN - 0195-668X
IS - 44
ER -