Mukai Seiji, Gagnon Margaret, Iloputaife Ikechukwu, Hamner Jason W, Lipsitz Lewis A
Research and Training Institute, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center for Aged, Gerontology Division, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and Division on Aging, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02131, USA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2003 Jul;58(7):626-30. doi: 10.1093/gerona/58.7.m626.
Aging is associated with diminished baroreflex sensitivity (gain), which predisposes elderly people to orthostatic hypotension, syncope, and cardiovascular morbidity. Aging is also associated with systolic blood pressure (SBP) elevation and carotid artery stiffness, which may both affect baroreflex gain.
We examined the relation between SBP, carotid artery stiffness, and baroreflex gain in 34 healthy elderly (71 +/- 4 years) and 10 healthy young (31 +/- 3 years) subjects. SBP (Finapres) and carotid artery stiffness (ultrasound measures of relative carotid artery diameter changes during each blood pressure pulse) were measured. The gain of the transfer function relating the R-R interval to SBP fluctuations at a frequency of 0.05-0.15 Hz was used to assess cardiovagal baroreflex gain.
Elderly subjects had higher carotid artery stiffness (14.2 +/- 5.1 vs 6.6 +/- 1.8, p <.05), higher SBP (146 +/- 24 vs 125 +/- 8 mmHg, p =.012), and lower baroreflex gain (8.2 +/- 6.4 vs 16.3 +/- 7.4, p <.05) than young subjects. Among all subjects, SBP and carotid artery stiffness both correlated with baroreflex gain (r = -.39, p =.02 for both). Although SBP was related to stiffness across all subjects, this relation was not present among the elderly subjects. Within the elderly group, only SBP was independently related to baroreflex gain (R(2) =.51, p =.009).
SBP elevation in elderly people may affect the neural or cardiac response to blood pressure fluctuations, independent of the mechanical properties of barosensory regions in the carotid artery. Future studies should examine the effect of pharmacologic treatment of hypertension on baroreflex gain in elderly people.
衰老与压力反射敏感性(增益)降低有关,这使老年人易患体位性低血压、晕厥和心血管疾病。衰老还与收缩压(SBP)升高和颈动脉僵硬度增加有关,这两者都可能影响压力反射增益。
我们研究了34名健康老年人(71±4岁)和10名健康年轻人(31±3岁)的收缩压、颈动脉僵硬度与压力反射增益之间的关系。测量收缩压(Finapres)和颈动脉僵硬度(通过超声测量每个血压脉冲期间相对颈动脉直径变化)。使用在0.05-0.15Hz频率下将R-R间期与收缩压波动相关的传递函数增益来评估心迷走神经压力反射增益。
与年轻受试者相比,老年受试者的颈动脉僵硬度更高(14.2±5.1对6.6±1.8,p<.05),收缩压更高(146±24对125±8mmHg,p=.012),压力反射增益更低(8.2±6.4对16.3±7.4,p<.05)。在所有受试者中,收缩压和颈动脉僵硬度均与压力反射增益相关(两者r=-0.39,p=.02)。尽管在所有受试者中收缩压与僵硬度相关,但在老年受试者中不存在这种关系。在老年组中,只有收缩压与压力反射增益独立相关(R²=.51,p=.009)。
老年人收缩压升高可能影响对血压波动的神经或心脏反应,独立于颈动脉压力感受区域的机械特性。未来的研究应探讨高血压药物治疗对老年人压力反射增益的影响。