Sex Differences in Pulse Pressure Trends With Age Are Cross-Cultural

Author:

Skurnick Joan H.1,Aladjem Mordechay1,Aviv Abraham1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health (J.H.S.) and Center of Human Development and Aging (A.A.), University of Medicine and Dentistry, New Jersey-New Jersey Medical School, Newark, N.J.; Assaf Harofe Medical Center (M.A.), Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Zerifin, Israel.

Abstract

Sex differences in systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels and trends with age have been consistently observed in both industrialized and unindustrialized populations. However, the impact of sex on pulse pressure, an index of vascular aging, in unindustrialized populations has not been addressed. The objective of this report was to characterize sex differences in aging trends of pulse pressure within unindustrialized populations. Using PubMed and Medline, we identified 60 articles with blood pressure data from unacculturated or partially acculturated populations. Data on 27 populations from 22 articles were included for analysis, on the basis of adequate description of study design and blood pressure measurement. Blood pressure means of adult age groups were modeled by linear and polynomial regression. The pulse pressure levels of women were lower than those of men in early adulthood and higher in older ages. Women had a steeper, steady increase in pulse pressure with age than men ( P <0.001), whereas men had a stronger curvilinear upswing in pulse pressure with age ( P =0.006). Partially acculturated populations had higher pulse pressures than unacculturated populations. Sex had a stronger effect on pulse pressure than acculturation. Pulse pressure trajectories of unindustrialized populations were slightly attenuated compared with those seen in National Health and Nutritional Examination Surveys III and IV of the US population. A sex effect on pulse pressure trends with age prevails across unacculturated and acculturated populations. Accordingly, the biological principles of arterial aging, as expressed in pulse pressure, are the same in all humans, regardless of demography.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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3. Huizinga J. Casual blood pressure in populations. In: The Human Biology of Environmental Change: Proceedings of a Conference Held in Blantyre Malawi April 5–12 1971. London United Kingdom: International Biological Programme; 1972: 164–167.

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