Hemodynamic Patterns of Age-Related Changes in Blood Pressure

Author:

Franklin Stanley S.1,Gustin William1,Wong Nathan D.1,Larson Martin G.1,Weber Michael A.1,Kannel William B.1,Levy Daniel1

Affiliation:

1. From the Heart Disease Prevention Program, University of California, Irvine (S.S.F, W.G., N.D.W.); the Framingham Heart Study, Framingham, Mass (M.G.L., W.B.K., D.L.); The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Md (D.L.); and Brookdale Hospital Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY (M.A.W.).

Abstract

Background We attempted to characterize age-related changes in blood pressure in both normotensive and untreated hypertensive subjects in a population-based cohort from the original Framingham Heart Study and to infer underlying hemodynamic mechanisms. Methods and Results A total of 2036 participants were divided into four groups according to their systolic blood pressure (SBP) at biennial examination 10, 11, or 12. After excluding subjects receiving antihypertensive drug therapy, up to 30 years of data on normotensive and untreated hypertensive subjects from biennial examinations 2 through 16 were used. Regressions of blood pressure versus age within individual subjects produced slope and curvature estimates that were compared with the use of ANOVA among the four SBP groups. There was a linear rise in SBP from age 30 through 84 years and concurrent increases in diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP); after age 50 to 60 years, DBP declined, pulse pressure (PP) rose steeply, and MAP reached an asymptote. Neither the fall in DBP nor the rise in PP was influenced significantly by removal of subsequent deaths and subjects with nonfatal myocardial infarction or heart failure. Age-related linear increases in SBP, PP, and MAP, as well as the early rise and late fall in DBP, were greatest for subjects with the highest baseline SBP; this represents a divergent rather than parallel tracking pattern. Conclusions The late fall in DBP after age 60 years, associated with a continual rise in SBP, cannot be explained by “burned out” diastolic hypertension or by “selective survivorship” but is consistent with increased large artery stiffness. Higher SBP, left untreated, may accelerate large artery stiffness and thus perpetuate a vicious cycle.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Reference40 articles.

1. Gordon I Shurtleff D. Section 29. Means at each examination and inter-examination variation of specified characteristics: Framingham Study Exam 1 to Exam 10. In: Kannel WB Gordon T eds. The Framingham Study: An Epidemiological Investigation of Cardiovascular Disease. Washington DC: US Department of Health Education and Welfare (National Institutes of Health); 1977:474-478.

2. Miall WE Brennan PJ. Hypertension in the elderly: the South Wales Study. In: Onesti G Kim KE eds. Hypertension in the Young and Old. 1st ed. New York NY: Grune & Stratton; 1981:277-283.

3. Whelton PK. Blood pressure in adults and the elderly. In: Bulpitt CJ ed. Handbook of Hypertension. Vol 6. Amsterdam Netherlands: Elsevier; 1985:51-69.

4. Remission of Hypertension

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