Literature DB >> 31584899

Weak within-individual association of blood pressure and pulse wave velocity in hemodialysis is related to adverse outcomes.

Pantelis A Sarafidis1, Charalampos Loutradis1, Christopher C Mayer2,3, Antonios Karpetas4, Eleni Pagkopoulou1, Athanasios Bikos1, Danai Faitatzidou1, Siegfried Wassertheurer2,3, Christoph Schmaderer5, Vassilios Liakopoulos6, Aikaterini Papagianni1, Gerard London7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Hemodialysis patients have premature arterial stiffness, and the relationship between pulse wave velocity (PWV) and blood pressure (BP) may be different than in other hypertensives. Previous studies in such patients showed that when BP decrease is accompanied by PWV decrease the survival is improved. This study examines the prognostic role of the mean BP (MBP)-PWV association for cardiovascular outcomes and all-cause mortality in hemodialysis.
METHODS: A total of 242 hemodialysis patients underwent 48-h ambulatory BP monitoring with Mobil-O-Graph-NG and were followed for 33.17 ± 19.68 months. The within-individual MBP-PWV association (MBP, dependent and PWV independent variable) was evaluated using the β-coefficient value from simple linear regression analysis for each patient. The primary end-point was first occurrence of all-cause death, nonfatal myocardial infarction or nonfatal stroke. Secondary end-points were all-cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality and a combination of cardiovascular events.
RESULTS: Higher quartiles of β-coefficients (indicating strong within-individual association of MBP with PWV) were related to greater cumulative freedom from the primary end-point (50.8, 60.0, 70.0 and 80.3% for quartiles 1-4, respectively; log-rank P = 0.001), better overall survival (60.7, 61.7, 73.3, 86.9%; log-rank P = 0.002) and better cardiovascular survival (78.7, 75.0, 81.7, 91.8% for quartiles 1-4; log-rank P = 0.044). The future risks of the primary end-point, all-cause and cardiovascular mortality and the combined outcome were progressively increasing with lower quartiles of β-coefficients, indicating patients with weak MBP-PWV association (hazard ratios for all-cause mortality 3.395; 95% confidence interval: 1.524-7.563, P = 0.003 for quartile 1 vs. quartile 4).
CONCLUSION: Weaker within-individual MBP-PWV association, based on ABPM recordings, is associated with higher risk of death and cardiovascular events in hemodialysis. These findings support that arterial stiffness insensitive to BP changes is the underlying factor for adverse outcomes in these individuals.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31584899     DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000002153

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hypertens        ISSN: 0263-6352            Impact factor:   4.844


  3 in total

1.  Excess volume removal following lung ultrasound evaluation decreases central blood pressure and pulse wave velocity in hemodialysis patients: a LUST sub-study.

Authors:  Charalampos Loutradis; Aikaterini Papagianni; Robert Ekart; Marieta Theodorakopoulou; Ioanna Minopoulou; Efstathios Pagourelias; Stella Douma; Asterios Karagiannis; Francesca Mallamaci; Carmine Zoccali; Gerard London; Pantelis A Sarafidis
Journal:  J Nephrol       Date:  2020-05-23       Impact factor: 3.902

Review 2.  Ambulatory monitoring of central arterial pressure, wave reflections, and arterial stiffness in patients at cardiovascular risk.

Authors:  Stefano Omboni; Ayana Arystan; Bela Benczur
Journal:  J Hum Hypertens       Date:  2021-09-13       Impact factor: 3.012

3.  Association of peridialytic, intradialytic, scheduled interdialytic and ambulatory BP recordings with cardiovascular events in hemodialysis patients.

Authors:  Fotini Iatridi; Marieta P Theodorakopoulou; Antonios Karpetas; Athanasios Bikos; Artemios G Karagiannidis; Maria-Eleni Alexandrou; Ioannis Tsouchnikas; Christopher C Mayer; Anna-Bettina Haidich; Aikaterini Papagianni; Gianfranco Parati; Pantelis A Sarafidis
Journal:  J Nephrol       Date:  2022-01-06       Impact factor: 3.902

  3 in total

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