AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how blood pressure during different life stages (childhood, young-adulthood, and mid-adulthood) influences large artery stiffness in mid-adulthood.
  • Blood pressure measurements were taken from 1869 participants across these stages, and results showed that a cumulative increase in systolic blood pressure was linked to greater artery stiffness, with mid-adulthood pressure being the most significant factor.
  • The findings suggest that maintaining healthy blood pressure levels at all life stages, especially mid-adulthood, could help mitigate the risks associated with arterial stiffness.

Article Abstract

Background Blood pressure associates with arterial stiffness, but the contribution of blood pressure at different life stages is unclear. We examined the relative contribution of childhood, young- and mid-adulthood blood pressure to mid-adulthood large artery stiffness. Methods and Results The sample comprised 1869 participants from the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study who had blood pressure measured in childhood (6-18 years), young-adulthood (21-30 years), and mid-adulthood (33-45 years). Markers of large artery stiffness were pulse wave velocity and carotid distensibility recorded in mid-adulthood. Bayesian relevant life course exposure models were used. For each 10-mm Hg higher cumulative systolic blood pressure across the life stages, pulse wave velocity was 0.56 m/s higher (95% credible interval: 0.49 to 0.63) and carotid distensibility was 0.13%/10 mm Hg lower (95% credible interval: -0.16 to -0.10). Of these total contributions, the highest contribution was attributed to mid-adulthood systolic blood pressure (relative weights: pulse wave velocity, childhood: 2.6%, young-adulthood: 5.4%, mid-adulthood: 92.0%; carotid distensibility, childhood: 5.6%; young-adulthood: 10.1%; mid-adulthood: 84.3%), with the greatest individual contribution coming from systolic blood pressure at the time point when pulse wave velocity and carotid distensibility were measured. The results were consistent for diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, and pulse pressure. Conclusions Although mid-adulthood blood pressure contributed most to mid-adulthood large artery stiffness, we observed small contributions from childhood and young-adulthood blood pressure. These findings suggest that the burden posed by arterial stiffness might be reduced by maintaining normal blood pressure levels at each life stage, with mid-adulthood a critical period for controlling blood pressure.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9238667PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.121.024394DOI Listing

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