Central Pressure More Strongly Relates to Vascular Disease and Outcome Than Does Brachial Pressure
University of Arizona · Cornell University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Brachial blood pressure is predictive of cardiovascular outcome; however central pressure may better represent the load imposed on the coronary and cerebral arteries and thereby bear a stronger relationship to vascular damage and prognosis. Relations of brachial and central pressures to carotid artery hypertrophy (intimal-medial thickness and vascular mass), extent of atherosclerosis (plaque score), and incident cardiovascular events were examined in the Strong Heart Study. Central pressures were calculated using radial applanation tonometry. Among 3520 participants, central and brachial pulse pressures were more strongly related to vascular hypertrophy and extent of atherosclerosis than were systolic…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.08
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
8- MJMary J. RomanCorresponding
University of Arizona, Cornell University, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, MedStar Health
- RBRichard B. Devereux
University of Arizona, Cornell University, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, MedStar Health
- JRJorge R. Kizer
University of Arizona, Cornell University, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, MedStar Health
- ETElisa T. Lee
University of Arizona, Cornell University, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, MedStar Health
- JMJames M. Galloway
University of Arizona, Cornell University, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, MedStar Health
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Brachial artery
- Blood pressure
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine
- Vascular disease
- Good health and well-being