Hypertension
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Both age and gender influence cardiovascular autonomic control, which in turn may influence the ability to withstand adverse cardiac events and respond to orthostatic stress. The purpose of this study was (1) to quantify age- and gender- related alterations in autonomic control of blood pressure (BP) and (2) to examine the impact of these autonomic alterations on BP response to orthostatic stress. We measured continuous BP and R-R intervals and vasoactive peptide levels in the supine and 60 degrees head-up tilt positions during paced respiration (0.25 Hz) in 89 carefully screened healthy subjects (41 men, 48 women, aged 20 to 83 years). ⋯ In elderly subjects, the tilt-induced increase in low-frequency BP power was also diminished (P=0.01), despite higher supine (P=0.02) and similar upright norepinephrine levels compared with younger subjects. Thus, healthy women have less sympathetic influence on BP and greater parasympathetic influence on R-R interval than men. Elderly subjects also have reduced sympathetic influence on BP, but this appears to be more consistent with a reduction in vasomotor sympathetic responsiveness.
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Comparative Study
Diastolic dysfunction and baroreflex sensitivity in hypertension.
The determinants of diastolic dysfunction in patients with systemic hypertension are not completely known. To evaluate the possible role of age, arterial blood pressure, and baroreflex heart rate response impairment in causing diastolic dysfunction, we studied 61 patients (42 male; mean+/-SD age, 43.9+/-12 years) with newly recognized and therefore previously untreated systemic hypertension. Diastolic dysfunction was evaluated by means of Doppler echocardiography (and diagnosed as such when the early to atrial peak velocity ratio corrected to heart rate was <1), arterial blood pressure by 24-hour ambulatory monitoring, and baroreflex heart rate response by means of the spectral technique (alpha index) during paced (0.27 Hz) and spontaneous breathing (in a supine position and during tilt). ⋯ The patients with diastolic dysfunction had significantly lower values for spectral baroreflex gain in the high-frequency band than those without (5.2+/-3 versus 8.4+/-5 ms/mm Hg during paced breathing, P<0.05; 7. 4+/-4 versus 13.3+/-7 ms/mm Hg in a supine position, P<0.05; 4.3+/-4 versus 5+/-2 ms/mm Hg during tilt, P