Arterial Stiffness and Cardiorespiratory Fitness Impairment in the Community

Author:

Nayor Matthew123ORCID,Gajjar Priya1ORCID,Miller Patricia4ORCID,Murthy Venkatesh L.5ORCID,Shah Ravi V.6ORCID,Houstis Nicholas E.7,Velagaleti Raghava S.38ORCID,Larson Martin G.34ORCID,Vasan Ramachandran S.3910ORCID,Lewis Gregory D.711ORCID,Mitchell Gary F.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cardiovascular Medicine Section, Department of Medicine Boston University School of Medicine Boston MA USA

2. Preventive Medicine and Epidemiology Section, Department of Medicine Boston University School of Medicine Boston MA USA

3. Boston University’s and NHLBI’s Framingham Heart Study Framingham MA USA

4. Department of Biostatistics Boston University School of Public Health Boston MA USA

5. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine and Frankel Cardiovascular Center, Department of Medicine University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI USA

6. Vanderbilt Translational and Clinical Research Center, Cardiology Division Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville TN USA

7. Cardiology Division, Department of Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA

8. Cardiology Section, Department of Medicine Boston VA Healthcare System West Roxbury MA USA

9. University of Texas School of Public Health San Antonio University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio TX USA

10. Departments of Medicine and Population Health Sciences University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio TX USA

11. Pulmonary Critical Care Unit, Department of Medicine Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School Boston MA USA

12. Cardiovascular Engineering, Inc. Norwood MA USA

Abstract

Background During exercise, a healthy arterial system facilitates increased blood flow and distributes it effectively to essential organs. Accordingly, we sought to understand how arterial stiffening might impair cardiorespiratory fitness in community‐dwelling individuals. Methods and Results Arterial tonometry and maximum effort cardiopulmonary exercise testing were performed on Framingham Heart Study participants (N=2898, age 54±9 years, 53% women, body mass index 28.1±5.3 kg/m 2 ). We related 5 arterial stiffness measures (carotid‐femoral pulse wave velocity [CFPWV]: a measure of aortic wall stiffness; central pulse pressure, forward wave amplitude, characteristic impedance: measures of pressure pulsatility; and augmentation index: a measure of relative wave reflection) to multidimensional exercise responses using linear models adjusted for age, sex, resting heart rate, habitual physical activity, and clinical risk factors. Greater CFPWV, augmentation index, and characteristic impedance were associated with lower peak oxygen uptake (VO 2 ; all P <0.0001). We observed consistency of associations of CFPWV with peak oxygen uptake across age, sex, and cardiovascular risk profile (interaction P >0.05). However, the CFPWV‐peak oxygen uptake relation was attenuated in individuals with obesity ( P =0.002 for obesity*CFPWV interaction). Higher CPFWV, augmentation index, and characteristic impedance were also related to cardiopulmonary exercise testing measures reflecting adverse O 2 kinetics and lower stroke volume and peripheral O 2 extraction but not to ventilatory efficiency, a prognostic measure of right ventricular‐pulmonary vascular performance. Conclusions Our findings delineate relations of arterial stiffness and cardiorespiratory fitness in community‐dwelling individuals. Future studies are warranted to evaluate whether the physiological measures implicated here may represent potential targets for improving cardiorespiratory fitness in the general population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Impact of arterial stiffness on cerebrovascular function: a review of evidence from humans and preclinical models;American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology;2024-03-01

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