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- Assessment of arterial distensibility by automatic pulse wave velocity measurement. Validation and clinical application studies. Hypertension, 1995. 26:485-490.
- Low molecular weight heparins : a guide to their optimum use in pregnancy. Drugs, 2002. 62:463-477.
- Influence of L-NAME, acetylcholine and adenosine on mean blood pressure, pulse pressure and pulse pressure amplification in rats. Journal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 2003. 41:210-8.
- Heart rate and pulse pressure amplification in hypertensive subjects. American Journal of Hypertension 2003. May;16(5):363-70.
- Gender influence on the relation between heart rate and aortic stiffness. Journal of Hypertension 2003. 21:555-562
- Pulse pressure and arterial stiffness in rats: comparison with humans. American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology, 2003. 285(4):H1363-9.

Laurent P, Albaladejo P, Blacher J, Rudnichi A, Smulyan H, Safar M.E. Heart rate and pulse pressure amplification in hypertensive subjects. American Journal of Hypertension, 2003. May;16(5):363-70.

Abstract :

Although mean blood pressure (MBP) remains unmodified along the arterial tree, pulse pressure (PP) increases physiologically from the central to the peripheral arteries. Amplification of PP is known to be influenced by heart rate (HR), but the impact of this alteration has never been tested in patients with hypertension.

METHODS : A total of 712 hypertensive subjects, either treated or untreated, were divided into three classes of HR level. Carotid and brachial systolic blood pressure (SBP), carotid augmentation index, a marker of wave reflections, and carotid-brachial PP amplification were measured using applanation tonometry.

RESULTS : Independent of age, sex, and antihypertensive drugs, subjects with HR >80 beats/min were characterized, in comparison with those with lower HR, by reduced carotid SBP, PP, and augmentation index, resulting in a significant increase in PP amplification. In men but not in women, this pattern was associated with higher values of brachial SBP and DBP and by higher incidences of elevated glycemia and atherosclerotic alterations. In the male population, PP amplifications was, independent of HR, associated with the presence of beta blocking agents (negative association) and elevated plasma glucose.

CONCLUSIONS : Hypertensive men and women with high HR have significant PP amplifications, principally because of reduced central SBP and disturbed wave reflections. beta-blocking agents and plasma glucose independently alter PP amplification in men but not in women. Whether these opposite patterns influence the gender difference in cardiovascular risk should be prospectively studied.

File last modified on june 30, 2006

 
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The coronarography, literally meaning the “x-ray of the coronary arteries”, is an exam requiring to puncture an artery of a member in order to introduce a hose through which a product impervious to X-rays will be injected, directly into the coronary arteries. More


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