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Artigo | IMSEAR | ID: sea-216228

RESUMO

Aim: Arterial stiffness, a major marker of vascular impedance, has been identified as a predictor of adverse cardiac outcomes. The present study determined the relationship between blood pressure (BP) and arterial stiffness measured noninvasively using a periscope in hypertensive patients. It has also evaluated the usefulness of indices of arterial stiffness in cardiovascular (CV) risk stratification and the necessity to implement these aortic pressure parameters in clinical practice. Methods: The prospective, observational study involved patients with hypertension between the age of 18 and 80 years. The demographic and anthropometric measurements of all the participants were recorded and various central and peripheral (brachial) arterial pressure parameters were measured using a periscope. The clinical variables were compared separately for different CV risk grades and arterial stiffness index (ASI) using Kruskal–Wallis test for non-normal data and chi-square test for count data. The correlation of different parameters with CV risk grade and ASI were evaluated using Spearmen’s correlation method. The agreement of different ASI indices with CV risk grades was assessed using Kappa method. Results: The study recruited a total of 3,032 patients with hypertension. Classification of the subjects for CV risk grades had demonstrated that major proportion of the patients (n = 713) had moderate and severe CV risks (n = 708). The classification of hypertensive patients for arterial stiffness had shown that 1,037 subjects had severe arterial stiffness. Classification of arterial stiffness based on BP levels had demonstrated that 623 patients with severe arterial stiffness and 315 with borderline arterial stiffness had stage II hypertension, and 480 patients with normal BP had no arterial stiffness. Brachial ASI had a strong correlation with systolic BP (SBP). A very good agreement with K value 0.871 was noted for Kappa agreement of arterial stiffness indices with CV risk. Conclusion: The present study corroborates the use of central BP parameters as indicators of arterial stiffness in hypertensive subjects. Noninvasive measurement of these indices has wider implications in personalized risk assessment of CV risk in subjects with hypertension.

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