More upright upper body positions significantly increased arterial stiffness indices, including pulse wave velocity and cardio-ankle vascular index (P<0.05).
Observational (n=30)
Does upper body position affect arterial stiffness indices in young adults?
Arterial stiffness indices increase with a more upright body position, and carotid beta-stiffness requires calibration for hydrostatic effects of gravity when measured seated.
valor p: p=<0.05
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate changes in arterial stiffness with positional change and whether the stiffness changes are due to hydrostatic pressure alone or if physiological changes in vasoconstriction of the conduit arteries play a role in the modulation of arterial stiffness. METHODS: Thirty participants' (male = 15, 24 ± 4 years) upper bodies were positioned at 0, 45, and 72° angles. Pulse wave velocity (PWV), cardio-ankle vascular index, carotid beta-stiffness index, carotid blood pressure (cBP), and carotid diameters were measured at each position. A gravitational height correction was determined using the vertical fluid column distance (mmHg) between the heart and carotid artery. Carotid beta-stiffness was calibrated using three methods: nonheight corrected cBP of each position, height corrected cBP of each position, and height corrected cBP of the supine position (theoretical model). Low frequency systolic blood pressure variability (LFSAP) was analyzed as a marker of sympathetic activity. RESULTS: PWV and cardio-ankle vascular index increased with position (P 0.05). CONCLUSION: Arterial stiffness increases with a more upright body position. Carotid beta-stiffness needs to be calibrated accounting for hydrostatic effects of gravity if measured in a seated position. It is unclear why PWV increased as this increase was independent of blood pressure. No difference between Methods 2 and 3 presumably indicates that the beta-stiffness increases are only pressure dependent, despite the increase in vascular sympathetic modulation.
Schroeder et al. (Wed,) reported a observational. More upright upper body position (45 and 72° angles) vs. Supine position (0° angle) was evaluated on Pulse wave velocity (PWV) and cardio-ankle vascular index (p=<0.05). More upright upper body positions significantly increased arterial stiffness indices, including pulse wave velocity and cardio-ankle vascular index (P<0.05).