Liakos Charalampos I, Sanidas Elias A, Perrea Despoina N, Grassos Charalampos A, Chantziara Vasiliki, Viniou Nora-Athina, Barbetseas John D, Papadopoulos Dimitrios P
ESH Center of Excellence for Hypertension, "Laiko" General Hospital, Athens, Greece;
Department of Experimental Surgery and Surgical Research "NS Christeas," Athens School of Medicine, Athens, Greece;
Am J Hypertens. 2016 May;29(5):549-52. doi: 10.1093/ajh/hpv136. Epub 2015 Aug 14.
High normal blood pressure (BP; 130-139/85-89 mm Hg) is related with increased cardiovascular (CV) risk compared to normal BP (120-129/80-84 mm Hg) or/and optimal BP (<120/80 mm Hg). Low apelin plasma levels have been associated with arterial hypertension and atherosclerosis, while high visfatin plasma levels may promote vascular inflammation and atherosclerotic plaque destabilization and have been evaluated as a marker for identifying stages of essential hypertension. We sought to compare the apelin and visfatin plasma levels between subjects with high normal BP and subjects with normal or optimal BP matched for age, gender, smoking, and body mass index (BMI).
Twenty-five subjects with high normal BP (office BP 136±3/88±2 mm Hg, age 57±4 years, 76% males, 32% smokers, BMI 24.0±1.7 kg/m2) and 35 subjects with normal or optimal BP (office BP 118±2/78±2 mm Hg, age 55±7 years, 63% males, 29% smokers, BMI 23.2±1.4 kg/m2) were studied. The apelin and visfatin plasma levels were determined with the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Compared to normal or optimal BP subjects, apelin levels were significantly lower (205±108 vs. 325±152 pg/ml, P < 0.001) and visfatin levels significantly higher (11.0±2.0 vs. 7.2±0.9 ng/ml, P = 0.002) in high normal BP subjects. No significant differences were found between the 2 groups (P = NS) regarding the basic clinical characteristics, the glycemic/lipid profile, and the renal function parameters.
The emerging, from the present study, data raise the hypothesis that lower apelin and higher visfatin plasma levels in high normal BP subjects compared to normal or optimal BP individuals could partially explain the higher CV risk of the high normal BP group.
与正常血压(120 - 129/80 - 84 mmHg)或/和理想血压(<120/80 mmHg)相比,血压处于高正常范围(130 - 139/85 - 89 mmHg)与心血管(CV)风险增加相关。血浆apelin水平降低与动脉高血压和动脉粥样硬化有关,而血浆内脂素水平升高可能促进血管炎症和动脉粥样硬化斑块不稳定,并且已被评估为识别原发性高血压阶段的标志物。我们试图比较血压处于高正常范围的受试者与年龄、性别、吸烟情况和体重指数(BMI)相匹配的正常或理想血压受试者之间的血浆apelin和内脂素水平。
研究了25名血压处于高正常范围的受试者(诊室血压136±3/88±2 mmHg,年龄57±4岁,76%为男性,32%吸烟,BMI 24.0±1.7 kg/m²)和35名正常或理想血压受试者(诊室血压118±2/78±2 mmHg,年龄55±7岁,63%为男性,29%吸烟,BMI 23.2±1.4 kg/m²)。采用酶联免疫吸附测定法测定血浆apelin和内脂素水平。
与正常或理想血压受试者相比,血压处于高正常范围的受试者apelin水平显著降低(205±108 vs. 325±152 pg/ml,P < 0.001),内脂素水平显著升高(11.0±2.0 vs. 7.2±0.9 ng/ml,P = 0.002)。两组在基本临床特征、血糖/血脂谱和肾功能参数方面未发现显著差异(P = 无显著性差异)。
本研究得出的新数据提出了一个假设,即与正常或理想血压个体相比,血压处于高正常范围的受试者血浆apelin水平较低和内脂素水平较高可能部分解释了高正常血压组较高的心血管风险。