6533b856fe1ef96bd12b305f
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Relationship between kidney findings and systemic vascular damage in elderly hypertensive patients without overt cardiovascular disease
Giulio GeraciGiuseppe MulèAntonella CastigliaPasquale MansuetoEmilia ScadutoGabriella PaladinoAntonio GranataSantina CottoneCalogero GeraciMarta Maria ZammutoFederica Zottasubject
MaleSettore MED/09 - Medicina InternaEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismStatistics as TopicHemodynamicsBlood PressureDisease030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyKidneyurologic and male genital diseasesCarotid Intima-Media ThicknessElderly0302 clinical medicineMedicine030212 general & internal medicineUltrasonography Doppler ColorPulse wave velocitySubclinical infectionBlood Pressure and the KidneyKidneyCarotid Arteriesmedicine.anatomical_structureItalyHypertensioncardiovascular systemCardiologyFemalemedicine.symptomCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineBlood Flow VelocityGlomerular Filtration Ratemedicine.medical_specialtyRenal functionVascular diseaseRenal disease03 medical and health sciencesVascular StiffnessEnglishInternal medicineInternal MedicineHumansRenal haemodyanmicSystemic vascular damageAgedSettore MED/14 - Nefrologiabusiness.industryVascular diseaseHemodynamicsmedicine.diseaseCross-Sectional StudiesAlbuminuriaVascular Resistancebusinessdescription
Few studies have investigated the influence of age on the relationships between systemic vascular damage, kidney dysfunction, and intrarenal hemodynamic changes in patients with hypertension without overt cardiovascular disease. The authors enrolled 126 elderly patients with hypertension (aged ≥65 years) and 350 nonelderly patients with hypertension (aged <65 years). Carotid intima‐media thickness, renal resistive index, and aortic pulse wave velocity were performed in all patients. Elderly patients with hypertension had lower estimated glomerular filtration rates and higher albuminuria, renal resistive index, carotid intima‐media thickness, and aortic pulse wave velocity compared with nonelderly patients with hypertension (P < .001). Carotid intima‐media thickness independently correlated with renal resistive index and estimated glomerular filtration rate in nonelderly patients with hypertension, whereas it was significantly related to renal resistive index only in elderly patients with hypertension. Aortic pulse wave velocity was independently associated with albuminuria in nonelderly patients with hypertension, whereas it did not independently correlate with any indexes of renal damage in elderly patients with hypertension. Age is an important modifier of the relationships between renal function and renal hemodynamics with subclinical vascular involvement in elderly persons without cardiovascular disease.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-06-06 | The Journal of Clinical Hypertension |