In hypertensive individuals, hsCRP is related to PWV, a direct marker of arterial stiffness, but not to AIx, a measure of wave reflections. Whether inflammation might act as a pathogenetic or modulating factor in arterial stiffening in chronic hypertension has to be confirmed.
Inducibility of ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation was associated with an increased likelihood of subsequent ICD activation and sudden cardiac death surrogate.
Abnormal ECG findings on noninvasive testing are well correlated with potential brady- or/and tachyarrhythmic causes of syncope, in electrophysiology study of patients with undiagnosed syncope.
The aim of this study was to evaluate any possible association of homocysteine with arterial stiffness indices in patients with essential arterial hypertension (AH), isolated office hypertension (IOH) and normotensive controls. The final cohort comprised 231 normotensives (NTs, 119 males), 480 patients with IOH (196 males) and 1188 patients with essential AH (713 males). All patients were screened for plasma homocysteine levels and lipidaemic profile and underwent aortic compliance and wave reflection assessment by using carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (PWVc-f) and aortic augmentation index corrected for heart rate (AIx) accordingly. In the total population, stepwise multiple linear regression analysis showed that homocysteine levels remained a significant determinant of PWV (beta (SE): 0.056 (0.007), P<0.001) and AIx (beta (SE): 0.236 (0.052), P<0.001) independently of the traditional factors affecting arterial stiffness and wave reflection. When the three groups were examined separately, homocysteine levels remained an independent determinant of PWFc-f in all groups (NT: beta (SE): 0.070 (0.022), P=0.002; IOH: beta (SE): 0.109 (0.015), P<0.001; AH: beta (SE): 0.040 (0.009), P<0.001). However, homocysteine levels remained an independent determinant of AIx only in the IOH and AH, but not in the NT group (IOH: beta (SE): 0.302 (0.124), P=0.015; AH: beta (SE): 0.183 (0.057), P=0.001; NT: beta (SE): 0.308 (0.240), P=0.200). This study points to an independent relationship between circulating homocysteine levels, aortic compliance and wave reflection.
The effect of long-term angiotensin II type 1 receptor blocker (ARB) therapy on inflammation indices has not been fully investigated in a hypertensive population. The authors evaluated 323 consecutive nondiabetic patients (mean age, 57 years; 176 men; 92 smokers) with high renin activity and uncomplicated essential hypertension whose blood pressure levels normalized (from 163.9/100.7 mm Hg to 131.6/82.8 mm Hg) after 4 weeks of ARB or ARB/diuretic treatment. All patients underwent full laboratory evaluation (routine examination of blood and urine, liver, kidney, thyroid function, and lipid and glucose profiles), including measurement of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A levels, at drug-free baseline, which was repeated after 6 months of ARB or ARB/diuretic treatment. A significant (P<.001) overall decrease was noted in both high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (-0.41+/-1.56 mg/dL) and serum amyloid A (-0.62+/-2.03 mg/dL), but a smaller decrease in high-sensitivity C-reactive protein and serum amyloid A change was seen in the smoker subgroup compared with nonsmokers (P<.05), indicating that the ARB or ARB/diuretic anti-inflammatory effect may be adversely affected by smoking status.
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