Higher serum aldosterone was associated with greater heart-femoral pulse wave velocity in adjusted models (β=0.042, P=0.049), though this was attenuated after adjusting for C-reactive protein.
Cross-Sectional (n=344)
Effect estimate: β 0.042
p-value: p=0.049
Circulating aldosterone is increased in obesity and is associated with arterial stiffening in hypertensives and older adults. The aim of this article was to determine whether serum aldosterone is associated with pulse wave velocity (PWV), a measure of arterial stiffness, in normotensive overweight and obese adults aged 20-45 years (n = 344). Heart-femoral, femoral-ankle, and brachial-ankle PWV were measured. The sample was 77% female with mean body mass index 32.9 kg/m(2) (SD 3.9), median serum aldosterone 106.5 pg/mL (interquartile range 79.9, 155.5), and mean 24-hour urinary sodium excretion 185.9 mEq/day (SD 69.6). Higher serum aldosterone was not significantly correlated with any PWV measure in bivariate analysis. However, in multiple linear regression, adjusting for age, sex, race, height, heart rate, mean arterial pressure, and waist circumference, higher log aldosterone was associated with greater log heart-femoral PWV (β(se) = 0.042(0.021), P = .049). After adjusting for C-reactive protein, this association was no longer significant (β(se) = 0.035(0.021), P = .10). Circulating aldosterone may play an important role in vascular inflammation and aortic stiffening in normotensive overweight and obese adults.
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Clinical and Experimental Hypertension
University of Pittsburgh
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Cooper et al. (Tue,) conducted a cross-sectional in Normotensive overweight and obesity (n=344). Serum aldosterone was evaluated on Pulse wave velocity (PWV) (β 0.042, p=0.049). Higher serum aldosterone was associated with greater heart-femoral pulse wave velocity in adjusted models (β=0.042, P=0.049), though this was attenuated after adjusting for C-reactive protein.
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