Arterial distensibility in subjects with white-coat hypertension with and without diabetes or dyslipidaemia: comparison with normotensives and sustained hypertensives
L. Ribeiro et al., Arterial distensibility in subjects with white-coat hypertension with and without diabetes or dyslipidaemia: comparison with normotensives and sustained hypertensives, BL PRESS M, 5(1), 2000, pp. 11-17
Objective To determine whether diabetes, smoking and dyslipidaemia were ass
ociated with greater than normal stiffness of aortic walls in subjects with
white-coat hypertension.
Methods Arterial distensibility was assessed by automatic measurement of ca
rotid-femoral PWV in 35 healthy normotensives, 46 white-coat hypertensives
(WCH, clinic blood pressures > 140/90 mmHg, daytime blood pressures < 130/8
5 mmHg) and 81 ambulatory hypertensives (clinic blood pressures > 140/90 mm
Hg, daytime blood pressures greater than or equal to 130 mmHg systolic or g
reater than or equal to 85 mmHg diastolic, or both) all matched for age, se
x and body mass index, Nineteen normotensives (subgroup A), 28 WCH (subgrou
p A) and 37 ambulatory hypertensives (subgroup A) had only one or no other
major cardiovascular risk factor whereas 16 normotensives (subgroup B), 18
WCH (subgroup B) and 44 ambulatory hypertensives (subgroup B) had also some
combination of non-insulin-dependent diabetes, a smoking habit and dyslipi
daemia.
Results Both for the WCH and for ambulatory hypertensives diabetes and dysl
ipidaemia (subgroups B) were associated with higher (P < 0.04) PWV (11.6 +/
- 0.3 and 12.8 +/- 0.3 m/s, respectively) than for subgroups A (9.3 +/- 0.5
and 10.9 +/- 0.6 m/s, respectively). In contrast, PWV for WCH in subgroup
A (9.3 +/- 0.5 m/s) did not differ (P > 0.35) from those for the normotensi
ve subgroups A (9.2 +/- 0.3 m/s) and B (9.6 +/- 0.4 m/s), PWV was not corre
lated to levels of glycaemia, glycosylated haemoglobin and cholesterolaemia
.
Conclusions These results suggest that, both for ambulatory hypertensives a
nd for WCH, diabetes and dyslipidaemia are associated with an impairment of
arterial distensibility that can entail a greater than normal cardiovascul
ar risk, which might dictate a more than usually stringent treatment of con
comitant risk factors and possibly of high blood pressure. In contrast, PWV
in WCH of the subgroup A did not differ from those in normotensives, reinf
orcing the hypothesis that WCH is associated with a benign cardiovascular o
utcome in the absence of other cardiovascular risk factors. (C) 2000 Lippin
cott Williams & Wilkins.