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Paper Title

Relation of Central Arterial Stiffness to Incident Heart Failure in the Community

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 4 | Issue : 11 | Page No : e002189

Published On

November, 2015

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Abstract

Background Arterial stiffness, pressure pulsatility, and wave reflection are associated with cardiovascular disease. Left ventricular function is coupled to proximal aortic properties, but the association of central aortic stiffness and hemodynamics with incident clinical heart failure (HF) is not well described. Methods and Results Framingham Study participants without clinical HF (n=2539, mean age 64 years, 56% women) underwent applanation tonometry to measure carotid‐femoral pulse wave velocity (CFPWV), central pulse pressure, forward wave amplitude, and augmentation index. CFPWV was inverse‐transformed to reduce heteroscedasticity and multiplied by −1 to restore effect direction (iCFPWV). Over 10.1 (range 0.04–12.9) years, 170 HF events developed. In multivariable‐adjusted analyses, iCFPWV was associated with incident HF in a continuous, graded fashion (hazards ratio [HR] per SD unit [SDU] 1.29, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.02–1.64, P=0.037). iCFPWV was associated with HF with reduced ejection fraction (HR=1.69/SDU, 95% CI 1.19–2.42, P=0.0037) in age‐ and sex‐adjusted models, which was attenuated in multivariable‐adjusted models (P=0.065). Central pulse pressure and forward wave amplitude were associated with HF in age‐ and sex‐adjusted models (per SDU, HR=1.20, 95% CI 1.06–1.37, P=0.006, and HR=1.15, 95% CI 1.01–1.31, P=0.036, respectively), but not in multivariable‐adjusted models (both P≥0.28). Augmentation index was not associated with HF risk (P≥0.19 in all models).

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