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Age-Related Changes in Total Arterial Capacitance From Birth to Maturity in a Normotensive Population

 

作者: Giovanni de Simone,   Mary J. Roman,   Stephen R. Daniels,   GianFrancesco Mureddu,   Thomas R. Kimball,   Rosanna Greco,   Richard B. Devereux,  

 

期刊: Hypertension  (OVID Available online 1997)
卷期: Volume 29, issue 6  

页码: 1213-1217

 

ISSN:0194-911X

 

年代: 1997

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

We evaluated the effect of body growth and aging on the ratio of echocardiographic (Teichholz) stroke volume to pulse pressure (SV/PP ratio) in 373 normal-weight, normotensive children to adolescents (1 day to 17 years old; 166 girls, 87 nonwhite) and 393 normal adults (17 to 85 years old; 164 women, 112 nonwhite). Stroke volume increased with age in children (r = .64, P < .0001) and was stable in adults; pulse pressure decreased slightly with age in children (r = -.10, P = .06) and increased in adults (r = .29, P < .0001). As a consequence, SV/PP ratio increased with age in children (r = .51, P < .0001) and decreased in adults (r = -.18, P = .0004). To control for changes in body size that influence the size of the arterial tree, we used ANCOVA to adjust SV/PP for body size. Body size-adjusted SV/PP ratio was no longer related to age in children, whereas the negative relation with aging in adults remained statistically significant (r = -.19, P < .0002). Heart rate was negatively related to SV/PP ratio in both children and adolescents and adults, but this relation did not influence the relation with age. In multivariate analysis, high SV/PP ratio was predicted by greater height (P < .002) and weight (P < .04) and nonwhite race (P < .001) in children and adolescents and by younger age (P < .0001), greater weight (P < .0001), and low heart rate (P < .001) in adults. Sex did not enter the regression models. Thus, (1) SV/PP ratio is a measure of increasing capacity of the arterial tree during growth, whereas it depends on arterial compliance during adulthood through old age; (2) arterial compliance decreases progressively with aging; (3) the apparent difference between males and females might be due to their different body sizes. (Hypertension. 1997;29:1213-1217.)

 



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