In a healthy community-based sample, advancing age and male sex were significantly associated with longer P-wave indices, establishing reference values for clinical application.
Cross-Sectional (n=295)
No
Establishes reference values for P-wave indices in a healthy population, demonstrating that these indices increase with age and are longer in men.
p-value: p=<0.0001
BACKGROUND: P-wave indices, an electrocardiographic phenotype reflecting atrial electrophysiology and morphology, may be altered in multiple disease states or by cardiovascular risk factors. Reference values for P-wave indices, providing cut points for their classification and interpretation, have not yet been established and are essential toward facilitating clinical application and comparison between studies. METHODS: We randomly selected 20 men and 20 women from 10-year age intervals between 75 years was limited by exclusion criteria. We used a digital measurement technique with demonstrated intrarater reproducibility to determine P-wave indices. P-wave indices examined included the maximum, mean, lead II and PR durations, dispersion, and the standard deviation of duration. RESULTS: All P-wave indices were significantly (P < 0.0001) correlated with advancing age. Means of all P-wave indices were lower in women as compared to men. PR-interval duration was strongly correlated with maximum, mean, and lead II mean P-wave durations. In multivariable models adjusting for significant anthropometric and clinical associations risk factors, significant differences persisted by age and sex in P-wave indices. CONCLUSIONS: In our healthy sample without cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, or obesity, men and older subjects had longer mean P-wave indices. Our description of P-wave indices establishes reference values for future comparative studies and facilitates the classification of P-wave indices.
Magnani et al. (Fri,) conducted a cross-sectional in Healthy (free of cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, or obesity) (n=295). Advancing age and male sex vs. Younger age and female sex was evaluated on P-wave indices (maximum, mean, lead II, PR durations, dispersion, and standard deviation) (p=<0.0001). In a healthy community-based sample, advancing age and male sex were significantly associated with longer P-wave indices, establishing reference values for clinical application.
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