Affiliation:
1. From the Division of Cardiology, University of Pennsylvania/Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center (J.A.C.), Philadelphia, PA; Biofluid, Tissue, and Solid Mechanics for Medical Applications, IBiTech (J.G.K., L.V.B., P.S.), and Heymans Institute of Pharmacology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium; Division of Cardiology, Weill Cornell Medical College (M.J.R., R.B.D.), New York, NY; Santa Maria Research Institute, Santa Maria Catholic University (J.M.-L.), Arequipa, Peru; Center for...
Abstract
Data regarding ethnic differences in wave reflections, which markedly affect the central pressure profile, are very limited. Furthermore, because age, heart rate, and body height are strong determinants of augmentation index, relating single measurements to normative data (in which augmentation index values correspond with average population values of its determinants) is challenging. We studied subject-level data from 10 550 adults enrolled in large population-based studies. In a healthy reference sample (n=3497), we assessed ethnic differences in augmentation index (ratio of second/first systolic peaks) and generated equations for adjusted
z
scores, allowing for a standardized comparison between individual augmentation index measurements and the normative population mean from subjects of the same age, sex, ethnic population, body height, and heart rate. After adjustment for age, body height, heart rate, and mean arterial pressure, African blacks (women: 154%; men: 138%) and Andean Hispanics (women: 152%; men: 133%) demonstrated higher central (aortic) augmentation index values than British whites (women: 140%; men: 128%), whereas American Indians (women: 133%; men: 122%) demonstrated lower augmentation index (all
P
<0.0001), without significant differences between Chinese and British whites. Similar results were found for radial augmentation index. Nonlinear ethnic/sex-specific equations for
z
scores were successfully generated to adjust individual augmentation index values for age, body height, and heart rate. Marked ethnic differences in augmentation index exist, which may contribute to ethnic differences in hypertensive organ damage. Our study provides normative data that can be used to complement the interpretation of individual hemodynamic assessments among men and women of various ethnic populations, after removing the effect of various physiological determinants.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
93 articles.
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