Age accounted for 39% to 56% of the variability in local carotid stiffness indices, enabling the creation of nomograms and Z-scores for clinical reference.
Cross-Sectional (n=1,847)
Yes
1,847 healthy subjects aged 3 to 74 years across 14 European centers underwent carotid ultrasound to establish age- and sex-specific reference values for arterial stiffness.
Age
Variability in carotid stiffness indices explained by age — R2 39-56%
Effect estimate: R2 39-56%
Interaction between arterial stiffness and hypertension plays an important role in the development of cardiovascular disease. Accordingly, assessment of arterial stiffness may provide a tool for estimating cardiovascular risk and monitoring therapy in hypertensive patients. Radiofrequency-based vascular ultrasound allows accurate noninvasive assessment of local mechanical properties of large arteries, but for its use in clinical practice, reference values according to age and sex are mandatory for each vascular site. To provide reference values for common carotid artery stiffness as assessed by an echo-tracking imaging system Hitachi-Aloka, we pooled measurements collected in 1847 healthy subjects aged 3-74 years (1008 males and 839 females) recruited in 14 European centers in the E-tracking International Collaboration (ETIC). Statistical models were developed to describe relationships of different stiffness indices with age and to calculate median values and Z-scores corresponding to ± 1 and ± 2 standard deviations. In our apparently healthy population, age accounted for 53% of variability in the elastic modulus (epsilon), 39% in arterial compliance, 47% in stiffness index (β), and 56% in local pulse wave velocity; on average, blood pressure accounted for a further 7.5% of variability. Dependence on age was not linear; changes in mean values increased at older ages, especially for epsilon and β. There was an interaction between age and gender for arterial compliance, which was higher in males. We present nomograms and a software that can be used for the automated calculation of Z-scores for local carotid stiffness in individual patients. These tools can be used to establish prognostic indicators or surrogate targets for treatment monitoring.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Tokuhisa Uejima
Cardiovascular Institute Hospital
Frank Dunstan
Cardiff University
Eloisa Arbustini
Heart Failure & Transplant
Journal of Human Hypertension
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
University College London
Cardiff University
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Uejima et al. (Wed,) conducted a cross-sectional in Healthy subjects (n=1,847). Age was evaluated on Variability in carotid stiffness indices explained by age (R2 39-56%). Age accounted for 39% to 56% of the variability in local carotid stiffness indices, enabling the creation of nomograms and Z-scores for clinical reference.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a20b0ad52a81c8a3de51e7f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41371-019-0228-5
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: