Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Apr 2020)

Role of Vascular Adaptation in Determining Systolic Blood Pressure in Young Adults

  • Shikai Yu,
  • Jessica E. Middlemiss,
  • Chiara Nardin,
  • Stacey S. Hickson,
  • Karen L. Miles,
  • Yasmin,
  • Kaisa M. Maki‐Petaja,
  • Barry J. McDonnell,
  • John R. Cockcroft,
  • Ian B. Wilkinson,
  • Carmel M. McEniery

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.119.014375
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7

Abstract

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Background Two individuals can have a similar pulse pressure (PP) but different levels of systolic blood pressure (SBP), although the underlying mechanisms have not been described. We hypothesized that, for a given level of PP, differences in SBP relate to peripheral vascular resistance (PVR); and we tested this hypothesis in a large cohort of healthy young adults. Methods and Results Demographic, biochemical, and hemodynamic data from 3103 subjects were available for the current analyses. In both men and women, for a given level of PP, higher SBP was associated with significantly higher body weight, body mass index, heart rate, and PVR (P<0.05 versus those with lower BP for all comparisons). Moreover, stratifying individuals by quartiles of PP and PVR revealed a stepwise increase in SBP from the lowest to highest quartile for each variable, with the highest SBP occurring in those in the highest quartile of both PP and PVR (P<0.001 for overall trend for both sexes). PVR was also increased with increasing tertile of minimum forearm vascular resistance, in both men (P=0.002) and women (P=0.03). Conclusions Increased PVR, mediated in part through altered resistance vessel structure, strongly associates with the elevation of SBP for a given level of PP in young adults. An impaired ability to adapt PVR appropriately to a given level of PP may be an important mechanism underlying elevated SBP in young adults.

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