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Effect of Age on Brachial Artery Wall Properties Differs From the Aorta and Is Gender Dependent: A Population Study

TLDR
The effect of age on large-artery wall properties is not uniform but depends on gender and vascular territory, and distensibility of the aorta, an elastic artery, decreases with age.
Abstract
Compliance and distensibility are wall properties of large arteries, which may play a role in cardiovascular disease. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the influence of age on these vessel wall properties differs between vascular territories and is gender-dependent. In a population sample of 498 men and women 20 to 79 years of age, diameter, distensibility, and compliance coefficient of the muscular brachial artery were measured with an echo-tracking device. Distensibility of the aorta was measured with the use of pulse-wave velocity. The effects of age and gender were assessed and adjusted for confounding factors such as mean blood pressure, pulse rate, body mass index, smoking, alcohol intake, and antihypertensive treatment. Covariance analysis showed no relation between gender and distensibility of the elastic aorta. Distensibility of the muscular brachial artery was lower in men, whereas men had a larger diameter and larger compliance of the brachial artery. With age, distensibility of the aorta decreased in both sexes to the same extent, whereas distensibility of the brachial artery did not change significantly. With age, brachial artery diameter increased; this increase was more pronounced in women. In men brachial artery compliance did not change with age, whereas in women compliance of the brachial artery increased with age. This study (1) confirms that distensibility of the aorta, an elastic artery, decreases with age. (2) In contrast to the aorta, after adjustment for confounding factors, in both men and women, no relation exists between age and distensibility of the muscular brachial artery. (3) Brachial artery diameter increase with age is more pronounced in women than in men. (4) In contrast to the well-known decrease in arterial compliance of elastic arteries with age, brachial artery compliance is not decreased with age and is increased in women. In conclusion, the effect of age on large-artery wall properties is not uniform but depends on gender and vascular territory.

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Citations
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Expert consensus document on arterial stiffness: methodological issues and clinical applications

TL;DR: This paper summarizes the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and is aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.
Journal Article

Expert consensus document on arterial stiffness : methodological issues and clinical applications. Commentary

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized the proceedings of several meetings of the European Network for Non-invasive Investigation of Large Arteries and aimed at providing an updated and practical overview of the most relevant methodological aspects and clinical applications in this area.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Arterial Stiffness and Wave Reflection With Advancing Age in Healthy Men and Women: The Framingham Heart Study

TL;DR: In this healthy cohort with a minimal burden of cardiovascular disease risk factors, an age-related increase in aortic stiffness was associated with increasing forward wave amplitude and pulse pressure and reversal of the arterial stiffness gradient, which may facilitate forward transmission of potentially deleterious pressure pulsations into the periphery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical applications of arterial stiffness; definitions and reference values

TL;DR: This article summarizes the methods and indices used to estimate arterial stiffness, and provides values from a survey of the literature, followed by recommendations of an international group of workers in the field who attended the First Consensus Conference on Arterial Stiffness, held in Paris during 2000.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recommendations for Improving and Standardizing Vascular Research on Arterial Stiffness: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

TL;DR: The field of arterial stiffness investigation, which has exploded over the past 20 years, has proliferated without logistical guidance for clinical and research studies, and questions that remain to be addressed in this field are addressed.
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Noninvasive determination of age-related changes in the human arterial pulse.

TL;DR: Changes in peak pressure in the central (carotid) artery show increasing cardiac afterload with increasing age in a normal population; this can account for the cardiac hypertrophy that occurs with advancing age (even as other organs atrophy) and the predisposition to cardiac failure in the elderly.
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Effects of aging on changing arterial compliance and left ventricular load in a northern Chinese urban community.

TL;DR: The results indicate that aging and not concomitant atherosclerosis (known to be rare in Asian populations) is the dominant factor associated with reduced arterial compliance and increased left ventricular load in these subjects.
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Alterations with Age in the Viscoelastic Properties of Human Arterial Walls

TL;DR: The circumferential incremental Young's modulus was measured in 59 major arteries of both “young” and “old” subjects and it was apparent that at all sites the arterial wall tissue became weaker with age.
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