Impact of aortic stiffness on survival in end-stage renal disease

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Impact of aortic stiffness on survival in end-stage renal disease
المؤلفون: Alain P. Guerin, Bruno Pannier, Michel E. Safar, Jacques Blacher, Gérard M. London, Sylvain J. Marchais
المصدر: Circulation. 99(18)
سنة النشر: 1999
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Arteriosclerosis, Disease, Comorbidity, Cohort Studies, Risk Factors, Cause of Death, Medicine, Life Tables, Prospective Studies, Aorta, Kidney, Smoking, Follow up studies, Middle Aged, Prognosis, medicine.anatomical_structure, Treatment Outcome, Cardiovascular Diseases, Hypertension, cardiovascular system, Cardiology, Aortic stiffness, Female, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Adult, medicine.medical_specialty, Aortic Diseases, Hyperlipidemias, End stage renal disease, Renal Dialysis, Physiology (medical), Internal medicine, medicine.artery, Humans, Aged, Proportional Hazards Models, business.industry, Ultrasonography, Doppler, Hypertrophy, medicine.disease, Survival Analysis, Elasticity, Surgery, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Arterial stiffness, Kidney Failure, Chronic, business, Kidney disease
الوصف: Background —Damage to large arteries is a major factor in the high cardiovascular morbidity and mortality of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Increased arterial stiffness and intima-media thickness, together with increased pulse pressure, are the principal arterial alterations. Whether increased aortic pulse-wave velocity (PWV), a classic marker of increased arterial stiffness, may predict all-cause and/or cardiovascular mortality has never been investigated. Methods and Results —A cohort of 241 patients with ESRD undergoing hemodialysis was studied between April 1987 and April 1998. The mean duration of follow-up was 72±41 months (mean±SD). Mean age at entry was 51.5±16.3 years. Seventy-three deaths occurred, including 48 cardiovascular and 25 noncardiovascular fatal events. At entry, together with standard clinical and biochemical analyses, patients underwent echocardiography and aortic PWV measured by Doppler ultrasonography. On the basis of Cox analyses, 2 factors emerged as predictors of all-cause and cardiovascular mortality: age and aortic PWV. Hemoglobin and low diastolic pressure interfered to a smaller extent. After adjustment for all the confounding factors, an OR for PWV >12.0 versus Conclusions —These results provide the first direct evidence that in patients with ESRD, increased aortic stiffness determined by measurement of aortic PWV is a strong independent predictor of all-cause and mainly cardiovascular mortality.
تدمد: 1524-4539
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::1048030110fc9dedfb5750b50dc8048dTest
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10318666Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....1048030110fc9dedfb5750b50dc8048d
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE