Authors
Konstantinos Vasileiadis, Christina Antza, Anastasia Malliora, Victoria Potoupni, Vasilios Kotsis
Published in
Vascular health and risk management. Volume 21. Pages 269-278. Epub Apr 24, 2025.
Abstract
Hypertension significantly impacts cardiovascular health, leading to arterial stiffness and myocardial dysfunction. Pulse wave velocity (PWV) is a recognized measure of arterial stiffness, while cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the gold standard for assessing myocardial structure and function. The aim of the present study is to investigate the relationship between arterial stiffness, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM), and cardiac MRI findings in untreated hypertensive individuals.
This cross-sectional study included 22 untreated hypertensive participants referred to the Hypertension ABPM Center of Excellence at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Participants underwent carotid-femoral PWV measurement and 24-hour ABPM. Cardiac function and structure were evaluated through cardiac MRI. Statistical analyses included Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests, with logistic regression for associations between c-f PWV and cardiac abnormalities. A significance threshold of p<0.05 was applied.
The study population had increased office and 24-hour ABPM values. Cardiac MRI revealed systolic LV dysfunction in 31.8% and diastolic LV dysfunction in 63.6% of participants. Myocardial fibrosis was present in 50% of the participants. Elevated PWV was significantly associated with LV systolic dysfunction (p=0.003), LV diastolic dysfunction (p=0.002), myocardial stiffness (p<0.001), and myocardial fibrosis (p = 0.004). Additionally, aortic valve velocity was significantly associated with increased arterial stiffness (p=0.006). Post-hoc analysis of fibrosis showed significant differences (p=0.007 for minimal vs no fibrosis; p=0.011 for severe vs no fibrosis).
The study confirms a significant correlation between increased arterial stiffness, systolic ABPM-derived systolic blood pressure, and cardiac MRI dysfunction in untreated hypertensive individuals. These findings highlight the importance of arterial stiffness evaluation as a diagnostic tool for early detection of myocardial dysfunction, allowing for timely intervention and targeted treatment strategies to mitigate heart damage.
PMID:
40297797
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 29 Apr 2025.
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