Background
Carotid‐femoral pulse‐wave velocity (cf‐PWV) and brachial‐ankle PWV (ba‐PWV) are the 2 most frequently applied PWV measurements. However, little is known about the comparison of ...hypertensive target organ damage (TOD) with cf‐PWV and ba‐PWV.
Methods and Results
A total of 1599 community‐dwelling elderly subjects (age >65 years) in northern Shanghai were recruited from June 2014 to August 2015. Both cf‐PWV and ba‐PWV were measured using SphygmoCor and VP1000 systems, respectively. Within the framework of comprehensive cardiovascular examinations, risk factors were assessed, and asymptomatic TOD, including left ventricular mass index, peak transmitral pulsed Doppler velocity/early diastolic tissue Doppler velocity (E/Ea), carotid intima‐media thickness, arterial plaque, creatinine clearance rate, and urinary albumin‐creatinine ratio were all evaluated. Both PWVs were significantly associated with male sex, age, waist/hip circumference, fasting plasma glucose, and systolic blood pressure, and ba‐PWV was also significantly related to body mass index. Both PWVs were significantly correlated with most TOD. When cf‐PWV and ba‐PWV were both or separately put into the stepwise linear regression model together with cardiovascular risk factors and treatment, only cf‐PWV, but not ba‐PWV, was significantly associated with carotid intima‐media thickness and creatinine clearance rate (P<0.05). When cf‐PWV and ba‐PWV were both or separately put into the same full‐mode model after adjustment for confounders, only cf‐PWV, but not ba‐PWV, showed significant association with carotid intima‐media thickness and creatinine clearance rate (P<0.05). Similar results were observed in logistic regression analysis.
Conclusions
Taken together, in the community‐dwelling elderly Chinese, cf‐PWV seems to be more closely associated with hypertensive TOD, especially vascular and renal TOD, as compared with ba‐PWV.
Clinical Trial Registration
URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT02368938.
From an epidemiological standpoint, quantifying the individual and the combined effect of lifestyle factors on uncontrolled blood pressure (BP) deserves further evaluation. We aimed to examine the ...individual and combined associations between unhealthy behaviors and uncontrolled hypertension among treated hypertensive adults. Cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from CONSTANCES, an ongoing French population-based cohort study. Uncontrolled BP was defined as mean systolic BP ≥140 mmHg and/or mean diastolic BP ≥90 mmHg. Unhealthy behaviors were considered as heavy alcohol consumption, low or medium adherence to dietary recommendations, sedentary physical activity level, and overweight. A total of 10,710 hypertensive treated volunteer participants were included and 56.1% had uncontrolled hypertension; of them, 2.0%, 24.5%, 54.0% and 19.5% exhibited 0, 1, 2 or ≥3 unhealthy behaviors respectively. In men, there was an increased odds of uncontrolled hypertension with heavy alcohol drinking compared to light-or-never (adjusted odds ratio 1.34, 95% CI 1.10-1.63), with low as well as with medium adherence to dietary recommendations compared to high (p < 0.05 for both), and with overweight or obesity compared to a normal body mass index (p ≤ 0.001 for both). In addition, men reporting a combination of ≥3 unhealthy behaviors compared to none, had an increased odds of hypertension of 1.67 (95% CI 1.09-2.53). Unhealthy behaviors described as, heavy alcohol consumption, non-adherence to dietary recommendations and overweight are associated with uncontrolled hypertension, at the individual and combined level, and particularly in men. Improvement of modifiable lifestyle factors could offer considerable benefits in the management of hypertension.
Increasing evidence shows that hypertension, which causes damage to small and large cerebral vessels, is the most important, modifiable, vascular risk factor for the development and progression of ...cognitive decline and dementia.11 Hypertension is, therefore, a major cause of coronary heart disease, stroke, arrhythmias, heart failure, renal disease, and dementia. Since the 1980s, mortality rates related to stroke and coronary heart disease have decreased in industrialised countries, partly because of improved blood pressure control. In summary, in terms of epidemiological transition, causes of cardiovascular death have clearly evolved over the past three decades: end-stage cardiovascular disease (atrial fibrillation, renal disease, dementia, and heart failure) is becoming more frequent than coronary heart disease and stroke. Because hypertension is the most prevalent cardiovascular risk factor for all these diseases, modification of antihypertensive strategies could have a considerable effect in delaying these degenerative diseases, thus further improving life expectancy.
The objective of the present study was to conduct the first systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies investigating the associations between total cholesterol (TC), HDL-cholesterol ...(HDL-C) and LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C) levels and the risk of breast cancer. Relevant studies were identified in PubMed (up to January 2014). Inclusion criteria were original peer-reviewed publications with a prospective design. Random-effects models were used to estimate summary hazard ratios (HR) and 95% CI. Distinction was made between studies that did or did not exclude cancer cases diagnosed during the first years of follow-up, thereby eliminating potential preclinical bias. Overall, the summary HR for the association between TC and breast cancer risk was 0.97 (95% CI 0.94, 1.00; dose-response per 1 mmol/l increment, thirteen studies), and that between HDL-C and breast cancer risk was 0.86 (95% CI 0.69, 1.09; dose-response per 1 mmol/l increment, six studies), with high heterogeneity (I2= 67 and 47%, respectively). For studies that eliminated preclinical bias, an inverse association was observed between the risk of breast cancer and TC (dose-response HR 0.94 (95% CI 0.89, 0.99), seven studies, I2= 78%; highest v. lowest HR 0.82 (95% CI 0.66, 1.02), nine studies, I2= 81%) and HDL-C (dose-response HR 0.81 (95% CI 0.65, 1.02), five studies, I2= 30 %; highest v. lowest HR 0.82 (95% CI 0.69, 0.98), five studies, I2= 0%). There was no association observed between LDL-C and the risk of breast cancer (four studies). The present meta-analysis confirms the evidence of a modest but statistically significant inverse association between TC and more specifically HDL-C and the risk of breast cancer, supported by mechanistic plausibility from experimental studies. Further large prospective studies that adequately control for preclinical bias are needed to confirm the results on the role of cholesterol level and its fractions in the aetiology of breast cancer.
Cadmium is inconsistently associated with blood pressure (BP) and hypertension. Our study focuses to understand the association between urinary cadmium levels, blood pressure, and hypertension in a ...French representative sample. Our study included 2015 subjects from the ESTEBAN survey (2014–2015) with measured urinary cadmium. Associations between natural logarithm-transformed cadmium levels and BP (systolic (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP)) were performed by adjusted linear regression models. Associations between cadmium and hypertension were performed by adjusted logistic regression models. Models were stratified by gender, smoking habits, body mass index (BMI), and kidney function categories. Men present higher SBP (131.7 vs. 121.5 mmHg,
p
< 0.0001) and DBP (78.9 vs. 74.7 mmHg,
p
< 0.0001) in comparison to women. Creatinine-adjusted urinary cadmium levels (0.48 vs. 0.39 μg/L,
p
< 0.0001) were higher in hypertensive subjects. Nevertheless, no difference was observed after adjustment for age, gender, and smoking habits. No correlation between urinary cadmium, BP, and hypertension was observed in overall population. Stratified models showed inverse correlations between urinary cadmium and hypertension among obese (OR = 0.39, 95% CI 0.21–0.57,
p
= 0.0009), chronic kidney function (OR = 0.68 95%CI 0.75–0.97,
p
= 0.003), and current smokers (OR = 0.78, 95% CI 0.64–0.92,
p
= 0.04). A correlation between urinary cadmium levels, BP, and hypertension is observed in subpopulations. Nevertheless, directions and significance of these associations differs by gender, BMI, smoking, and kidney function categories.
Antihypertensive drugs remain one of the main beneficial strategies for cardiovascular disease prevention. The objective of our study was to investigate the associations of different clinical and ...socioeconomic (SES) factors, and the use of primary care medicine with treatment and adherence (proportion of days covered (PDC) by treatment) to hypertension management in French participants aware of their hypertension. Cross-sectional analyses of treatment for hypertension and adherence to treatment were performed using data from 396 participants from the ESTEBAN survey, a representative sample of the French population. Logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate associations between SES factors (age, sex, education, income, civil status), clinical factors, health care (general practitioner (GP) visits, cardiologist visits, number of consultations, home blood pressure measurement (HBPM)), treatment and adherence. A total of 265 of the 396 hypertensive patients were treated. Antihypertensive drug use was more common among elderly individuals (OR: 2.73 1.14; 4.32), diabetic patients (OR: 4.18 1.92; 6.44 and overweight hypertensive patients (OR = 3.04 1.09; 4.99). GP consultations and HBPM were associated with increased treatment (OR: 1.03 1.01; 1.05; OR: 1.97 1.06; 2.61, respectively). The PDC was higher among men (p = 0.045) and couples living together (p = 0.018) but lower among diabetic patients (p = 0.012) and patients visiting a cardiologist (p = 0.008). Education and income levels were not associated with either treatment or the PDC. In France, SES factors seemed to have little impact on treatment and adherence to antihypertensive drug regimens. However, treatment administered by GPs and HBPM may play key roles in hypertension management. Although the PDC was quite low, both the number of GP consultations and HBPM were positively associated with pharmacological treatment.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
We aimed to assess the hypertension (HTN) awareness and associated factors in France.
METHODS
We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using data from the CONSTANCES ...population-based cohort involving 87,808 volunteer participants included between 2012 and 2018. HTN was defined as average blood pressure (BP) over 140/90 or use of BP medication, awareness as self-reported HTN. Multivariable logistic regression models were used to identify the associated factors.
RESULTS
Overall, 27,160 hypertensive participants (men = 16,569) above 18 years old were analyzed. Hypertension awareness rate was 37.5%. In the multivariable regression model, awareness was predicted by female gender, age, prior cardiovascular disease (CVD), presence of diabetes mellitus (DM), presence of chronic kidney disease (CKD), level of education, and obesity or overweight. Older participants (P < 0.001), females (P < 0.001), participants with comorbidities (P < 0.001), were more likely to be aware when compared with younger participants, males and participants without comorbidities, respectively. The unawareness among participants without cardiometabolic factors (CMF, i.e., CVD, DM, CKD) was higher than participants with CMF (67% vs. 41%, respectively, P < 0.001). Moreover, some differences appeared in both genders in the association between awareness of HTN and health and lifestyle factors.
CONCLUSION
Our findings show that HTN awareness is low. Particular attention should be given to young men without comorbidities as these characteristics were predictors of poor awareness. Immediate action is required to improve HTN awareness in France.
Elective coronography has low diagnostic yield for obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). We aim to determine whether non-invasive aortic stiffness assessment improves diagnostic accuracy of CAD ...screening by reducing the number of false-positive results from the cardiac stress test. A cross-sectional study was conducted from January 2013 to September 2014 in our medical center. Electrocardiogram (ECG) stress test coupled with nuclear imaging was performed in 367 consecutive patients routinely followed for myocardial ischemia screening. Aortic pulse wave velocity (PWV) was assessed by applanation tonometry in the overall population. Forty-two patients underwent elective coronography because of ischemia. Theoretical PWV was calculated according to age, blood pressure and gender. The results were expressed as an index ((measured PWV-theoretical PWV)/theoretical PWV) for each patient. Ten patients presented with obstructive CAD, 16 patients had non-obstructive CAD and 16 patients had normal coronary angiography. PWV index and severity of CAD were positively correlated (P=0.001). All patients with obstructive CAD had a positive PWV index. When considering the PWV index retrospectively, the false positive results of cardiac stress test were significantly reduced (P<0.001). Twenty-three procedures may have been avoided in the present study cohort. The salient finding of this study was that in patients with known or suspected CAD, routinely followed aortic PWV index may be considered clinically useful for reducing the rate of unnecessary invasive angiographies. The clinical relevance of this individualized decision approach should be confirmed in a large-scale study. Prospective studies have the potential to evaluate the PWV index as a marker of CAD.
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Blood pressure (BP) includes a steady (mean arterial pressure, MAP) and a pulsatile component that independently predict mortality. The association between longitudinal changes in ...central (c) pulse pressure (PP), brachial (b) PP, MAP, and incident mortality has never been investigated in this context.
METHODS
Brachial MAP and PP were measured at 2 routine checkups (1st visit 1992; mean interval, 5.8 ± 2.4 years) in 71,629 individuals, age 16–95 years, none on antihypertensive drugs. cPP was estimated with a validated algorithm. Each change (visit 2-1) in bPP, cPP, and MAP, expressed in mm Hg/year, was categorized as: increase, decrease, or no-change, with the latter representing the control-group. Follow-up data (6.9 ± 3.3 years) on all-cause mortality (2,033 deaths) were documented.
RESULTS
All-cause mortality Cox regression models adjusted for confounders showed that compared to the subgroup with steady BP at both visits, the subgroup with: (i) increased bPP or cPP had an approximately 200% increase in relative risk (RR); (ii) decreased cPP and bPP had a 15% reduction in RR; (iii) increased MAP had a 68% increase in RR; (iv) decreased MAP had a 7% increase in RR of mortality. Interaction analysis stratified by gender showed that annual increases in PP, but not MAP, were greater in younger than older men and lower in younger than older women. Age cutoff value was 55 years.
CONCLUSIONS
MAP and PP have distinct characteristics affecting all-cause mortality. PP integrates the effects of age and gender on all-cause mortality more notably than MAP, thus impacting significantly on cardiovascular risk.
Dietary interventions are recommended for the prevention of hypertension. The aim of this study was to evaluate and quantify the relationship between alcohol consumption and the DASH (Dietary ...Approaches to Stop Hypertension) score with blood pressure (BP) stratified by gender.
Cross-sectional analyses were performed using data from 2105 adults from the ESTEBAN survey, a representative sample of the French population. Pearson correlation analyses were used to assess the correlation between the DASH score and alcohol with BP. Regressions were adjusted by age, treatment, socio-economic level, tobacco, exercise, Body mass index (BMI), and cardiovascular risk factors and diseases.
The DASH score was negatively correlated with systolic (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) (
< 0.0001). Alcohol was positively associated with increased BP only in men. The worst quintile of the DASH score was associated with an 1.8 mmHg increase in SBP and an 0.6 mmHg increase in SBP compared to the greatest quintile in men and with a 1.5 mmHg increase in SBP and an 0.4 mmHg increase in SBP in women. Male participants in the worst quintile of alcohol consumption showed an increase of 3.0 mmHg in SBP and 0.8 mmHg in DBP compared to those in the greatest quintile.
A high DASH score and a reduction in alcohol consumption could be effective nutritional strategies for the prevention of hypertension.