Literature DB >> 30519485

Arterial stiffness and hypertension.

Young S Oh1.   

Abstract

Measures of the functional and structural properties of blood vessels can be used to assess preclinical stage of vascular disorders. Recent experimental and population studies show that arterial stiffening precedes development of high blood pressure, and can be used to predict future cardiovascular events. Arterial stiffness was also shown to be reversible in several experimental models of various conditions. Since reversing arterial stiffness could prevent development of hypertension and other clinical conditions, understanding the biological mechanisms of arterial stiffening and investigating potential therapeutic interventions to modulate arterial stiffness are important research topics. For research and application in general clinical settings, it is an important step to develop reliable devices and a standardized arterial stiffness measurement protocol.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aortic stiffness; Arterial; Cardiovascular disease; Hypertension; Vascular biology

Year:  2018        PMID: 30519485      PMCID: PMC6271566          DOI: 10.1186/s40885-018-0102-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Hypertens        ISSN: 2056-5909


Introduction

The walls of large arteries, especially the aorta, lose elasticity over time, and this process results in increased arterial stiffness. Arterial stiffening, at least in part, reflects gradual fragmentation and loss of elastin fibers and accumulation of stiffer collagen fibers in the arterial wall [1]. Increased arterial stiffness is closely linked to increased risk of hypertension and other diseases, such as chronic kidney disease and stroke [2]. In this brief review, I will discuss recent progress in relating arterial stiffness research to hypertension.

Arterial stiffness precedes hypertension

Although the causality between increased arterial stiffness and hypertension is complex because of many confounding factors (e.g., aging, diet, concurrent disease, life style, etc.), recent studies in humans and animals suggest that increased arterial stiffness can precede hypertension. For example, several research projects funded by the NHLBI (National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute) – the NIH (National Institutes of Health) Institute focused on supporting cardiovascular research – had examined the temporal and causal relationship between arterial stiffness and hypertension [3]. Studies in five different animal models concluded that arterial stiffness precedes high blood pressure. These animal models included: (i) diet-included obesity model, (ii) elastin gene knock-out model, (iii) stroke-prone Dahl salt-sensitive rat model, (iv) klotho gene knock-out model, and (v) type 2 diabetes model. In clinical studies, a consistent temporal sequence of arterial stiffness preceding hypertension was also observed in the Framingham Heart Cohort Study [4]. However, the biological mechanisms and cellular processes whereby increased arterial stiffness alone can lead to hypertension are still not understood, encouraging further investigation.

Is arterial stiffness reversible?

Both human and animal studies have suggested that arterial stiffness is reversible. In a murine model of diet-induced obesity, the increased pulse wave velocity (PWV: the gold standard in vivo measure for arterial stiffness) in obese mice fed a high fat/high sucrose diet (HFHS) for 5 months was reduced to normal after returning obese mice to standard chow for 2 months [5]. During the 2-month period, indices of metabolic impairment of obese mice such as body weight, fat mass and hyperinsulinemia, returned to normal; PWV and high blood pressure also returned to normal. Further, Fry et al. [6] studied the potential effect of dietary resveratrol on arterial stiffness. The authors found that resveratrol, a polyphenol known to activate the deacetylase sirtuin-1, prevented the HFHS-induced inflammation and excess oxidant production in the arterial wall as well as the accompanying increase in PWV. Interestingly, administration of a sirtuin-1 specific activator (SRT1720), after 8 months of HFHS, decreased PWV to normal values within 2 weeks. The positive effect of dietary resveratrol on arterial stiffness was further replicated in non-human primates that were fed high caloric diets [7], underscoring its translational potential in humans. Using an aging rat model (i.e., 20 month-old), Steppan et al. [8] studied the relationship between exercise, tissue transglutaminase (TG2) activity, and arterial stiffness; TG2, an enzyme catalyzing protein cross-links, is known to play a role in vascular stiffness with age [9]. The authors found that there was significant suppression of an age-associated increase in TG2 activity when animals were subjected to moderate-intensity exercise, which was correlated with increased nitric oxide bioavailability and reduced collagen depositions in the extracellular matrix. Interestingly, these biochemical changes did not translate into a significant alteration in vascular stiffness, supporting the hypothesis that once formed, the TG2 crosslinks may have a long half-life in the vascular matrix. Thus, it seems that the reversibility of vascular stiffness may be limited to a certain stage or type of vascular condition leading to stiffness. In humans, short-term aerobic exercise (3 months) reduced arterial stiffness in older adults (> 65 years) with type 2 diabetes and might thereby lower the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality [10]. A recent randomized clinical trial study (SAVE: Slow Adverse Vascular Effects of excess weight) also showed the reversibility of vascular stiffness by moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in overweight or obese young adults [11]. In addition, some anti-hypertensive medications (i.e., angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin II receptor I antagonist) are shown to reduce arterial stiffness significantly [12]. Thus, arterial stiffness associated with some medical conditions can be reversed by life style change or treatment.

Conclusion and perspectives

Arterial stiffness is an important arterial phenotype and an excellent indicator of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality [13]. It is an independent predictor of hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. Recent studies in animal models showed that large artery stiffening preceded development of high blood pressure. This temporal sequence was also observed in clinical studies. Nevertheless, it should be kept in mind that the relationship between arterial stiffness and blood pressure can be complex. For example, there are patients who have high blood pressure with normal PWV values [14]. Both arterial stiffness and hypertension are positively associated with aging. Studies from animals and humans suggest that arterial stiffness can be reversible under certain conditions (Fig. 1). Niiranen et al. [15] have recently studied healthy vascular aging (HVA) - defined as absence of hypertension and lack of arterial stiffness – in more than 3100 participants (aged > 50 years) of the Framingham Heart Study and have found that maintaining HVA beyond age 70 is extremely challenging. With rapid population aging, it will be important in the future to explore the possibility of prevention or reversal of arterial stiffness as a potential therapeutic strategy to control hypertension and/or hypertension-related diseases. In this regard, the European Society of Hypertension and the European Society of Cardiology published a guideline in 2013 to suggest the measurement of arterial stiffness as a way of evaluating hypertensive patients at high cardiovascular risk [2]. In recognizing the clinical importance of arterial stiffness, the American Heart Association also published a scientific statement to encourage further improvement and standardization of arterial stiffness measurements for clinical use and vascular research [13]. Once a standardized measurement protocol and reliable devices are available, arterial stiffness can provide us valuable information about the risk of hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and early vascular aging.
Fig. 1

A simplified model of arterial stiffening and its reversibility. With aging, blood vessel structural changes and endothelial dysfunction can occur. Various factors contribute to arterial stiffening, such as changes in the composition of elastin and collagen fibers, calcification, and inflammation in the arterial wall. It seems there is a critical time zone during the process of arterial stiffening when a PM (Positive Modifier: such as exercise, healthy diet, weight loss, or anti-hypertensive drug) cannot reverse vascular stiffness. Future research is needed to characterize this critical zone

A simplified model of arterial stiffening and its reversibility. With aging, blood vessel structural changes and endothelial dysfunction can occur. Various factors contribute to arterial stiffening, such as changes in the composition of elastin and collagen fibers, calcification, and inflammation in the arterial wall. It seems there is a critical time zone during the process of arterial stiffening when a PM (Positive Modifier: such as exercise, healthy diet, weight loss, or anti-hypertensive drug) cannot reverse vascular stiffness. Future research is needed to characterize this critical zone
  15 in total

1.  Vascular Smooth Muscle Sirtuin-1 Protects Against Diet-Induced Aortic Stiffness.

Authors:  Jessica L Fry; Leona Al Sayah; Robert M Weisbrod; Isabelle Van Roy; Xiang Weng; Richard A Cohen; Markus M Bachschmid; Francesca Seta
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2016-07-18       Impact factor: 10.190

2.  Decreased S-nitrosylation of tissue transglutaminase contributes to age-related increases in vascular stiffness.

Authors:  Lakshmi Santhanam; Eric C Tuday; Alanah K Webb; Phillip Dowzicky; Jae Hyung Kim; Young Jun Oh; Gautam Sikka; Maggie Kuo; Marc K Halushka; Anne M Macgregor; Jessilyn Dunn; Sarah Gutbrod; David Yin; Artin Shoukas; Daniel Nyhan; Nicholas A Flavahan; Alexey M Belkin; Dan E Berkowitz
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2010-05-20       Impact factor: 17.367

3.  Characteristics of healthy vascular ageing in pooled population-based cohort studies: the global Metabolic syndrome and Artery REsearch Consortium.

Authors:  Peter M Nilsson; Stephane Laurent; Pedro G Cunha; Michael H Olsen; Ernst Rietzschel; Oscar H Franco; Ligita Ryliškytė; Irina Strazhesko; Charalambos Vlachopoulos; Chen-Huan Chen; Pierre Boutouyrie; Francesco Cucca; Edward G Lakatta; Angelo Scuteri
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 4.844

Review 4.  A Special Report on the NHLBI Initiative to Study Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms of Arterial Stiffness and Its Association With Hypertension.

Authors:  Young S Oh; Dan E Berkowitz; Richard A Cohen; C Alberto Figueroa; David G Harrison; Jay D Humphrey; Douglas F Larson; Jane A Leopold; Robert P Mecham; Nelson Ruiz-Opazo; Lakshmi Santhanam; Francesca Seta; John Y J Shyy; Zhongjie Sun; Philip S Tsao; Jessica E Wagenseil; Zorina S Galis
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2017-11-10       Impact factor: 17.367

Review 5.  Elastin in large artery stiffness and hypertension.

Authors:  Jessica E Wagenseil; Robert P Mecham
Journal:  J Cardiovasc Transl Res       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 4.132

6.  2013 ESH/ESC Guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension: the Task Force for the management of arterial hypertension of the European Society of Hypertension (ESH) and of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC).

Authors:  Giuseppe Mancia; Robert Fagard; Krzysztof Narkiewicz; Josep Redón; Alberto Zanchetti; Michael Böhm; Thierry Christiaens; Renata Cifkova; Guy De Backer; Anna Dominiczak; Maurizio Galderisi; Diederick E Grobbee; Tiny Jaarsma; Paulus Kirchhof; Sverre E Kjeldsen; Stéphane Laurent; Athanasios J Manolis; Peter M Nilsson; Luis Miguel Ruilope; Roland E Schmieder; Per Anton Sirnes; Peter Sleight; Margus Viigimaa; Bernard Waeber; Faiez Zannad
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2013-07       Impact factor: 4.844

7.  Arterial stiffening precedes systolic hypertension in diet-induced obesity.

Authors:  Robert M Weisbrod; Tina Shiang; Leona Al Sayah; Jessica L Fry; Saumendra Bajpai; Cynthia A Reinhart-King; Heinrich E Lob; Lakshmi Santhanam; Gary Mitchell; Richard A Cohen; Francesca Seta
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2013-09-23       Impact factor: 10.190

8.  Aortic stiffness, blood pressure progression, and incident hypertension.

Authors:  Bernhard M Kaess; Jian Rong; Martin G Larson; Naomi M Hamburg; Joseph A Vita; Daniel Levy; Emelia J Benjamin; Ramachandran S Vasan; Gary F Mitchell
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2012-09-05       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  Recommendations for Improving and Standardizing Vascular Research on Arterial Stiffness: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association.

Authors:  Raymond R Townsend; Ian B Wilkinson; Ernesto L Schiffrin; Alberto P Avolio; Julio A Chirinos; John R Cockcroft; Kevin S Heffernan; Edward G Lakatta; Carmel M McEniery; Gary F Mitchell; Samer S Najjar; Wilmer W Nichols; Elaine M Urbina; Thomas Weber
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2015-07-09       Impact factor: 10.190

10.  Exercise, vascular stiffness, and tissue transglutaminase.

Authors:  Jochen Steppan; Gautam Sikka; Simran Jandu; Viachaslau Barodka; Marc K Halushka; Nicholas A Flavahan; Alexey M Belkin; Daniel Nyhan; Mark Butlin; Alberto Avolio; Dan E Berkowitz; Lakshmi Santhanam
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2014-04-10       Impact factor: 5.501

View more
  14 in total

1.  Volume elastic modulus with exponential function of transmural pressure as a valid stiffness measure derived by photoplethysmographic volume-oscillometry in human finger and radial arteries: potential for arteriosclerosis screening.

Authors:  Takehiro Yamakoshi; Peter Rolfe; Akira Kamiya; Ken-Ichi Yamakoshi
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2021-07-15       Impact factor: 2.602

2.  Glycolysis regulated transglutaminase 2 activation in cardiopulmonary fibrogenic remodeling.

Authors:  Chinmayee D Bhedi; Sabina Nasirova; Deniz Toksoz; Rod R Warburton; Kevin J Morine; Navin K Kapur; Jonas B Galper; Ioana R Preston; Nicholas S Hill; Barry L Fanburg; Krishna C Penumatsa
Journal:  FASEB J       Date:  2019-11-28       Impact factor: 5.191

3.  Endothelial sodium channel activation mediates DOCA-salt-induced endothelial cell and arterial stiffening.

Authors:  Liping Zhang; Yan Yang; Annayya R Aroor; Guanghong Jia; Zhe Sun; Alan Parrish; Garrett Litherland; Benjamin Bonnard; Frederic Jaisser; James R Sowers; Michael A Hill
Journal:  Metabolism       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 8.694

Review 4.  Report of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Working Group on Hypertension: Barriers to Translation.

Authors:  Curt D Sigmund; Robert M Carey; Lawrence J Appel; Donna K Arnett; Hayden B Bosworth; William C Cushman; Zorina S Galis; Melissa Green Parker; John E Hall; David G Harrison; Alicia A McDonough; Holly L Nicastro; Suzanne Oparil; John W Osborn; Mohan K Raizada; Jacqueline D Wright; Young S Oh
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  2020-02-17       Impact factor: 10.190

5.  Utility of obesity and metabolic dyslipidemia (a non-insulin based determinate of the metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance) in predicting arterial stiffness.

Authors:  Annayya R Aroor; Adam Whaley-Connell; James R Sowers
Journal:  J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich)       Date:  2019-07-18       Impact factor: 3.738

6.  The Relationship Between Glycemic Control and Concomitant Hypertension on Arterial Stiffness in Type II Diabetes.

Authors:  Teonchit Nuamchit; Duangduan Siriwittayawan; Piyanuch Thitiwuthikiat
Journal:  Vasc Health Risk Manag       Date:  2020-08-25

7.  Changes in pulse pressure × heart rate, hs-CRP, and arterial stiffness progression in the Chinese general population: a cohort study involving 3978 employees of the Kailuan Company.

Authors:  Hao Xue; Jun-Juan Li; Jian-Li Wang; Shuo-Hua Chen; Jing-Sheng Gao; Yun-Dai Chen; Shou-Ling Wu
Journal:  J Geriatr Cardiol       Date:  2019-09       Impact factor: 3.327

8.  RNA-sequencing analysis of differential gene expression associated with arterial stiffness.

Authors:  Jeongok G Logan; Sijung Yun; Yongde Bao; Emily Farber; Charles R Farber
Journal:  Vascular       Date:  2020-05-06       Impact factor: 1.285

9.  Co-expression of glycosylated aquaporin-1 and transcription factor NFAT5 contributes to aortic stiffness in diabetic and atherosclerosis-prone mice.

Authors:  Rosalinda Madonna; Vanessa Doria; Anikó Görbe; Nino Cocco; Péter Ferdinandy; Yong-Jian Geng; Sante Donato Pierdomenico; Raffaele De Caterina
Journal:  J Cell Mol Med       Date:  2020-01-22       Impact factor: 5.310

Review 10.  Age-related changes in cerebrovascular health and their effects on neural function and cognition: A comprehensive review.

Authors:  Benjamin Zimmerman; Bart Rypma; Gabriele Gratton; Monica Fabiani
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2021-03-16       Impact factor: 4.016

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.