Abstract
It has been known for many years that baroreflex sensitivity is
lowered in hypertensive patients. There are several known
factors implicating this association, e.g. high blood pressure leads
to remodeling of the carotid arterial wall, to its stiffness and to a
diminished activation of baroreceptors; leptin released from a
fatty tissue activates the sympathetic nervous system etc. On the
other hand, low baroreflex sensitivity (BRS, usually quantified in
ms/mmHg) can be inborn. Studies on primary hypertension in
children and adolescents have brought new information about
the role of baroreflex in the development of an early stage of
primary hypertension. BRS lower than 3.9 ms/mmHg was found
in 5 % of healthy subjects. This value approaches the critical
value for the risk of sudden cardiac death in patients after
myocardial infarction and corresponds to the value present in
hypertensive patients. A decreased BRS and BRSf (baroreflex
sensitivity expressed in mHz/mmHg, index independent of the
mean cardiac interval), was found not only in children with
hypertension, but also in those with white-coat hypertension.
This is in accordance with a single interpretation. The decrease of
BRS/BRSf precedes a pathological blood pressure increase. The
contribution of obesity and BRS/BRSf to the development of
hypertension in adolescents was also compared. Both factors
reach a sensitivity and a specificity between 60 % and 65 %, but
there is no correlation between the values of the body mass
index and BRS either in the group of hypertensive patients or in
healthy controls. If a receiver operating curve (sensitivity versus
specificity) is plotted for both values together using logistic
regression analysis, a sensitivity higher than 70 % and a
specificity over 80 % are reached. This means that low baroreflex
sensitivity is an independent risk factor for the development of
primary hypertension. Studies demonstrate that adolescents with
increased blood pressure and with BRS under 7 ms/mmHg should
be given care and intensively motivated to change their lifestyle
including a change in diet and increase in physical activity.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
39 articles.
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