Are measures of aortic stiffness associated with peripheral microvascular function?
2045 participants (1107 women, mean age 61±9 years) in the Framingham Heart Study offspring cohort.
Evaluation of aortic stiffness using arterial tonometry (brachial pulse pressure, carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity [CFPWV], and forward pressure wave amplitude [Pf]).
Forearm vascular resistance (FVR) and blood flow at baseline and during reactive hyperemia after 5 minutes of forearm ischemia.surrogate
Abnormal aortic stiffness and increased pressure pulsatility are associated with blunted microvascular reactivity to ischemic stress, independent of conventional cardiovascular risk factors.
Background— Aortic stiffness and small-artery structure and function share various risk factors; however, relations between these 2 measures of vascular function are complex and incompletely understood. Methods and Results— We examined hyperemic forearm blood flow, an indicator of microvascular structure and function, and aortic stiffness in 2045 participants (1107 women, mean age 61±9 years) in the Framingham Heart Study offspring cohort. Using arterial tonometry, we evaluated 3 measures of aortic stiffness: brachial pulse pressure; carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (CFPWV), which is related directly to aortic wall stiffness; and forward pressure wave amplitude (P f ), which is related directly to aortic wall stiffness and inversely to aortic diameter. Using high-resolution ultrasound and Doppler, we evaluated brachial artery diameter, blood flow, and forearm vascular resistance (FVR) at baseline and during reactive hyperemia after 5 minutes of forearm ischemia. In multivariable models that adjusted for cardiovascular disease risk factors, local brachial pulse pressure, CFPWV, and P f , considered separately, were associated with increased baseline and hyperemic FVR ( P <0.001). In models that further adjusted for mean arterial pressure, each measure of aortic stiffness was associated with reduced hyperemic flow ( P <0.001). In risk factor–adjusted models that simultaneously considered CFPWV and P f , both were associated with increased FVR at baseline ( P <0.01) and during hyperemia ( P <0.001). Conclusions— Our findings indicate that abnormal aortic stiffness and increased pressure pulsatility are associated with blunted microvascular reactivity to ischemic stress that is in excess of changes attributable to conventional cardiovascular disease risk factors alone, including mean arterial pressure.
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Mitchell et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d6cadc8dca315383ed8f96 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.105.551168
Gary F. Mitchell
General Cardiology
Joseph A. Vita
Preventive Cardiology
Martin G. Larson
Semmelweis University
Circulation
National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
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