Argyris Antonios A, Nasothimiou Efthimia, Aissopou Evaggelia, Papaioannou Theodoros G, Zhang Yi, Blacher Jacques, Safar Michel E, Sfikakis Petros P, Protogerou Athanase D
Cardiovascular Prevention & Research Unit, Department of Pathophysiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece; 1st Department of Propaedeutic Internal Medicine, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
Cardiovascular Prevention & Research Unit, Department of Pathophysiology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece; 1st Department of Propaedeutic Internal Medicine, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece.
J Am Soc Hypertens. 2018 Feb;12(2):117-127. doi: 10.1016/j.jash.2017.12.005. Epub 2017 Dec 14.
The difference in pulse pressure (PP) between peripheral arteries and the aorta, called pulse pressure amplification (PPamp), is a well-described physiological phenomenon independently associated with cardiovascular events. Recent studies suggest that it exhibits circadian variability. Our aim was to detect the factors associated with the circadian variability of PPamp. In 497 consecutive subjects (aged 54 years, 56.7% male, 79.7% hypertensives), we assessed the circadian pattern of peripheral and central arterial hemodynamics by 24-hour evaluation of brachial and aortic blood pressure (BP), augmentation index (AI), and pulse wave velocity (PWV) using a validated oscillometric device (Mobil-O-Graph). All parameters exhibited a circadian variation. Sleep dipping (decrease) pattern was observed for PPamp, brachial and aortic systolic BP, mean BP, and PWV, whereas a rising pattern (higher sleep than wake values) was observed for brachial PP, aortic PP, and AI. The factors independently associated with the less sleep dipping in PPamp were older age, lower height, the use of antihypertensive medication, and sleep decrease in arterial stiffness (PWV), whereas female gender, the presence of hypertension, sleep increase of pressure wave reflections (AI), sleep decrease in heart rate, and mean BP were associated with a greater sleep-dipping in PPamp. These data provide further pathophysiological understanding of the mechanisms leading to PPamp dipping. Several implications regarding the clinical use of the aortic and brachial BP, especially during sleep time, are raised that should be addressed in future research.
外周动脉与主动脉之间的脉压(PP)差异,即脉压放大(PPamp),是一种已被充分描述的生理现象,与心血管事件独立相关。最近的研究表明,它呈现昼夜变化。我们的目的是检测与PPamp昼夜变化相关的因素。在497名连续入选的受试者(年龄54岁,男性占56.7%,高血压患者占79.7%)中,我们使用经过验证的示波装置(Mobil-O-Graph),通过对肱动脉和主动脉血压(BP)、增强指数(AI)和脉搏波速度(PWV)进行24小时评估,来评估外周和中心动脉血流动力学的昼夜模式。所有参数均呈现昼夜变化。观察到PPamp、肱动脉和主动脉收缩压、平均血压以及PWV呈睡眠时下降模式,而肱动脉脉压、主动脉脉压和AI呈上升模式(睡眠时的值高于清醒时)。与PPamp睡眠时下降较少独立相关的因素包括年龄较大、身高较低、使用抗高血压药物以及动脉僵硬度(PWV)睡眠时下降,而女性性别、高血压的存在、压力波反射(AI)睡眠时增加、心率睡眠时下降以及平均血压与PPamp睡眠时下降幅度较大相关。这些数据为导致PPamp下降的机制提供了进一步的病理生理学理解。提出了一些关于主动脉和肱动脉血压临床应用的问题,特别是在睡眠时间,这些问题应在未来的研究中加以解决。