Diastolic blood pressure and mortality in the elderly with cardiovascular disease

被引:191
|
作者
Protogerou, Athanase D.
Safar, Michel E.
Iaria, Pierre
Safar, Helene
Le Dudal, Katia
Filipovsky, Jan
Henry, Olivier
Ducimetiere, Pierre
Blacher, Jacques
机构
[1] Univ Paris 05, Ctr Diagnost & Therapeut, Fac Med, APGP,Hotel Dieu Hosp, F-75181 Paris 04, France
[2] Charles Univ Prague, Dept Internal Med, Plzen, Czech Republic
[3] INSERM U258, Villejuif, France
关键词
diastolic blood pressure; mortality; elderly; arterial stiffness; pressure wave reflections; total peripheral resistance;
D O I
10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.089797
中图分类号
R6 [外科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100210 ;
摘要
Isolated systolic hypertension is predominantly observed in the elderly because of increased arterial stiffness. Aggressive treatment leads to excessive lowering of diastolic blood pressure and favors the presence of a J-shaped curve association with mortality. We investigated whether, in the elderly, this pattern of association is a simple epiphenomenon of increased arterial stiffness and impaired cardiac function. In a cohort of 331 hospitalized subjects > 70 years old (mean age +/- SD: 85 +/- 7 years), aortic pulse wave velocity and pressure wave reflections, by pulse wave analysis, and cardiac function, by ultrasound, were assessed. During a 2-year follow-up period, 110 subjects died. No association of prognosis with systolic pressure, pulse pressure, or pulse wave velocity was observed. A J-shaped association between diastolic pressure and overall and cardiovascular mortality was observed. Unadjusted Cox regression analysis showed that patients in the first tertile of diastolic pressure (<= 60 mm Hg) had higher mortality. In Cox regression analysis, diastolic pressure <= 60 mm Hg was a predictor of mortality independently from cardiac - vascular properties, cardiovascular risk factors, and drug treatment. Multivariate regression analysis showed that increased age and low total peripheral resistance, but not left ventricular function, were the cardinal determinants of low diastolic pressure. An "optimal" diastolic pressure of 70 mm Hg in subjects with isolated systolic hypertension was found. We showed that, in the frail elderly, a value of diastolic blood pressure <= 60 mm Hg is associated with reduced survival, independent from large artery stiffness and left ventricular function, suggesting that more rational antihypertensive therapy, not only based on systolic pressure level, is needed.
引用
收藏
页码:172 / 180
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Low Diastolic Blood Pressure and Mortality in Elderly People
    Kim, Dae Hyun
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2009, 57 (11) : 2176 - 2177
  • [2] Blood pressure and mortality in patients with cardiovascular disease
    Chen, Jing
    Gu, Donfeng
    Whelton, P.
    Chen, Chung-Shiuan
    Wu, Xigui
    Duan, Xingfeng
    Reynolds, Kristi
    Hamm, L. Lee
    Whelton, Paul K.
    He, Jiang
    [J]. HYPERTENSION, 2006, 48 (04) : E41 - E41
  • [3] Cumulative Diastolic Blood Pressure Burden In Normal Systolic Blood Pressure And Cardiovascular Disease
    Cho, So Mi J.
    Lee, Hokyou
    Koyama, Satoshi
    Schuermans, Art
    Ganesh, Shriienidhie
    Hornsby, Whitney
    Honigberg, Michael C.
    Natarajan, Pradeep
    [J]. HYPERTENSION, 2023, 80
  • [4] CUMULATIVE DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE BURDEN IN NORMAL SYSTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE AND CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE
    Cho, So Mi Jemma
    Lee, Hokyou
    Koyama, Satoshi
    Schuermans, Art
    Ganesh, Shriienidhie
    Hornsby, Whitney
    Honigberg, Michael
    Natarajan, Pradeep
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2024, 42
  • [5] Cumulative Diastolic Blood Pressure Burden in Normal Systolic Blood Pressure and Cardiovascular Disease
    Cho, So Mi Jemma
    Lee, Hokyou
    Koyama, Satoshi
    Zou, Roger S.
    Schuermans, Art
    Ganesh, Shriienidhie
    Hornsby, Whitney
    Honigberg, Michael C.
    Natarajan, Pradeep
    [J]. HYPERTENSION, 2024, 81 (02) : 273 - 281
  • [6] High maximum exercise diastolic blood pressure associated with future cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality in men
    Wei, M
    Gibbons, LW
    Mitchell, TL
    Wallace, JM
    [J]. CIRCULATION, 2000, 102 (18) : 697 - +
  • [7] Lower diastolic blood pressure and increased heart rate are independent predictors of mortality for 1 year in elderly outpatients: Data from Frailty in elderly with cardiovascular disease.
    Diniz, A. R.
    Frisoli, A.
    Pinto, E. T.
    Majeski, J. D.
    Erlichman, M.
    Carvalho, A. C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY, 2012, 60 : S147 - S147
  • [8] LOW DIASTOLIC BLOOD PRESSURE AS A CARDIOVASCULAR RISK FACTOR IN ELDERLY HYPERTENSIVE SUBJECTS
    Hermida, A.
    Lopez, J. E.
    Alende, M. J.
    Calvo, G.
    Pose, A.
    Calvo, C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2015, 33 : E221 - E221
  • [9] J-shaped curve for cardiovascular mortality: systolic or diastolic blood pressure?
    Nicolás Roberto Robles
    Francesco Fici
    Guido Grassi
    [J]. Journal of Nephrology, 2019, 32 : 347 - 353
  • [10] MORTALITY AND MAJOR CARDIOVASCULAR EVENTS ASSOCIATED WITH BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL AND CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE IN THE ELDERLY
    Kabore, Jean
    Metzger, Marie
    Helmer, Catherine
    Drueke, Tilman B.
    Massy, Ziad A.
    Stengel, Benedicte
    [J]. NEPHROLOGY DIALYSIS TRANSPLANTATION, 2016, 31 : 53 - 53