Vascular aging is directly related to several major diseases including clinical primary hypertension. Conversely, elevated blood pressure itself accelerates vascular senescence. However, the interaction between vascular aging and hypertension has not been characterized during hypertensive aging. To depict the interconnectedness of complex mechanisms between hypertension and aging, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing of aorta, femoral and mesentery arteries, respectively, from male Wistar Kyoto rats and male spontaneously hypertensive rats aging 16 or 72 weeks. We integrated 12 data sets to map the blood vessels of senile hypertension from 3 perspective: vascular aging, hypertension, and vascular type. We found that aging and hypertension independently exerted a significant impact on the alteration of cellular composition and artery remodeling, even greater when superimposed. Consistently, smooth muscle cells (SMCs) underwent phenotypic switching from contractile toward synthetic, apoptotic, and senescent SMCs with aging/hypertension. Furthermore, we identified 3 subclusters of Spp1high, encoding protein osteopontin (OPN), synthetic SMCs, Spp1high matrix activated fibroblasts, and Spp1high scar-associated macrophage involved in hypertensive aging. Spp1high scar-associated macrophage enriched for reactive oxygen species metabolic process and cell migration-associated function. Cell-cell communication analysis revealed Spp1-Cd44 receptor pairing was markedly aggravated in the hypertensive aging condition. Importantly, the concentration of serum OPN significantly potentiated in aged hypertensive patients compared with the normal group. Thus, we provide a comprehensive cell atlas to systematically resolve the cellular diversity and dynamic cellular communication changes of the vessel wall during hypertensive aging, identifying a protein marker OPN as a potential regulator of vascular remodeling during hypertensive aging.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gerona/glad188 | DOI Listing |
J Bone Joint Surg Am
January 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Oncology, Learning Cancer Outcome Research Program, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas.
Background: Comorbidity indices are used to help to estimate patients' length of hospital stay, care costs, outcomes, and mortality. Increasingly, they are considered in reimbursement models. The applicability of comorbidity indices to patients undergoing orthopaedic oncology surgery has not been studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
January 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Division of Population Health and Applied Health Sciences, Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Memorial University, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
Background: The number of persons living with multimorbidity-defined as the co-occurrence of at least two chronic conditions in the same individual-is growing globally, especially in developed countries. Traditionally, this increase has been attributed to a growing aging population, sedentary lifestyle, obesity, low socioeconomic status, and individual genetic susceptibility.
Objective: To investigate the prevalence and associated risk factors of the most common multimorbidity (MCM) among Canadian middle-aged and older adults.
PLoS One
January 2025
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Although studies have investigated the association between adverse childhood experiences and chronic health outcomes including stroke, few studies have investigated the association between parental divorce and stroke among adults with no history of childhood abuse. The objectives of this study were to investigate the association between parental divorce in childhood and stroke in older adulthood among those who did not experience child abuse and to examine whether this association differs between men and women. This study utilized population-based data from the 2022 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBlood Press
January 2025
Jagiellonian University Medical College, 1st Department of Cardiology, Interventional Electrocardiology and Arterial Hypertension, Kraków, Poland.
Purpose: Ventricular-arterial coupling (VAC) is a crucial concept in cardiovascular physiology, representing the dynamic interaction between the left ventricle and the arterial system. This comprehensive literature review explores the changes in VAC with aging and various cardiovascular diseases (CVDs).
Materials And Methods: This literature review covers studies on changes in VAC with age and common CVDs such as arterial hypertension, atrial fibrillation, heart failure with preserved and reduced ejection fraction and aortic stenosis.
Hypertension
January 2025
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA (W.Z., D.H., M.A.M., Y.M.).
Background: Hypotensive episodes detected by 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring capture daily cumulative hypotensive stress and could be clinically relevant to cognitive impairment, but this relationship remains unclear.
Methods: We included participants from the Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention Trial (receiving intensive or standard BP treatment) who had 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring measured near the 27-month visit and subsequent biannual cognitive assessments. We evaluated the associations of hypotensive episodes (defined as systolic BP drops of ≥20 mm Hg between 2 consecutive measurements that reached <100 mm Hg) and hypotensive duration (cumulative time of systolic BP <100 mm Hg) with subsequent cognitive function using adjusted linear mixed models.
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