Mitchell Gary F, Vasan Ramachandran S, Keyes Michelle J, Parise Helen, Wang Thomas J, Larson Martin G, D'Agostino Ralph B, Kannel William B, Levy Daniel, Benjamin Emelia J
Cardiovascular Engineering Inc, Waltham, Mass 02453, USA.
JAMA. 2007 Feb 21;297(7):709-15. doi: 10.1001/jama.297.7.709.
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is responsible for considerable morbidity and mortality, making identification of modifiable risk factors a priority. Increased pulse pressure, a reflection of aortic stiffness, increases cardiac load and may increase AF risk.
To examine relations between pulse pressure and incident AF.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Prospective, community-based observational cohort in Framingham, Mass, including 5331 Framingham Heart Study participants aged 35 years and older and initially free from AF (median age, 57 years; 55% women).
Incident AF.
AF developed in 698 participants (13.1%) a median of 12 years after pulse pressure assessment. Cumulative 20-year AF incidence rates were 5.6% for pulse pressure of 40 mm Hg or less (25th percentile) and 23.3% for pulse pressure greater than 61 mm Hg (75th percentile). In models adjusted for age, sex, baseline and time-dependent change in mean arterial pressure, and clinical risk factors for AF (body mass index, smoking, valvular disease, diabetes, electrocardiographic left ventricular hypertrophy, hypertension treatment, and prevalent myocardial infarction or heart failure), pulse pressure was associated with increased risk for AF (adjusted hazard ratio [HR], 1.26 per 20-mm Hg increment; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.12-1.43; P<.001). In contrast, mean arterial pressure was unrelated to incident AF (adjusted HR, 0.96 per 10-mm Hg increment; 95% CI, 0.88-1.05; P = .39). Systolic pressure was related to AF (HR, 1.14 per 20-mm Hg increment; 95% CI, 1.04-1.25; P = .006); however, if diastolic pressure was added, model fit improved and the diastolic relation was inverse (adjusted HR, 0.87 per 10-mm Hg increment; 95% CI, 0.78-0.96; P = .01), consistent with a pulse pressure effect. Among patients with interpretable echocardiographic images, the association between pulse pressure and AF persisted in models that adjusted for baseline left atrial dimension, left ventricular mass, and left ventricular fractional shortening (adjusted HR, 1.23; 95% CI, 1.09-1.39; P = .001).
Pulse pressure is an important risk factor for incident AF in a community-based sample. Further research is needed to determine whether interventions that reduce pulse pressure will limit the growing incidence of AF.
心房颤动(AF)会导致相当高的发病率和死亡率,因此确定可改变的风险因素成为当务之急。脉压升高反映了主动脉僵硬度增加,会增加心脏负荷,并可能增加房颤风险。
研究脉压与新发房颤之间的关系。
设计、地点和参与者:在马萨诸塞州弗雷明汉进行的基于社区的前瞻性观察队列研究,包括5331名年龄在35岁及以上且最初无房颤的弗雷明汉心脏研究参与者(中位年龄57岁;55%为女性)。
新发房颤。
在脉压评估后中位数12年时,698名参与者(13.1%)发生了房颤。脉压为40 mmHg或更低(第25百分位数)时,20年累积房颤发病率为5.6%;脉压大于61 mmHg(第75百分位数)时,20年累积房颤发病率为23.3%。在根据年龄、性别、平均动脉压的基线和随时间的变化以及房颤的临床风险因素(体重指数、吸烟、瓣膜病、糖尿病、心电图左心室肥厚、高血压治疗以及既往心肌梗死或心力衰竭)进行调整的模型中,脉压与房颤风险增加相关(调整后的风险比[HR],每增加20 mmHg为1.26;95%置信区间[CI],1.12 - 1.43;P <.001)。相比之下,平均动脉压与新发房颤无关(调整后的HR,每增加10 mmHg为0.96;95% CI,0.88 - 1.05;P =.39)。收缩压与房颤相关(HR,每增加20 mmHg为1.14;95% CI,1.04 - 1.25;P =.006);然而,如果加入舒张压,模型拟合度改善且舒张压的关系呈负相关(调整后的HR,每增加10 mmHg为0.87;95% CI,0.78 - 0.96;P =.01),这与脉压效应一致。在有可解释超声心动图图像的患者中,在根据基线左心房内径、左心室质量和左心室缩短分数进行调整的模型中,脉压与房颤之间的关联仍然存在(调整后的HR,1.23;95% CI,1.09 - 1.39;P =.001)。
在基于社区的样本中,脉压是新发房颤的重要风险因素。需要进一步研究以确定降低脉压的干预措施是否会限制房颤发病率的不断上升。