Artery Research

Volume 1, Issue S1, June 2006, Pages S42 - S42

P.061 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FIBRINOGEN AND ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN PATIENTS WITH ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION

Authors
C. Vlachopoulos*, P. Pietri, K. Aznaouridis, G. Vyssoulis, D. Adamopoulos, S.M. Kyvelou, P. Tapinis, C. Liakos, C. Stefanadis
Hypertension Unit, 1st Department of Cardiology, Athens Medical School, Hippokration Hospital, Athens, Greece
Available Online 13 June 2007.
DOI
10.1016/S1872-9312(07)70084-4How to use a DOI?
Open Access
This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC license.

Introduction: Increased levels of prothrombotic markers such as fibrinogen and plasminogen activator-inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) have been related to target organ damage and cardiovascular outcomes in hypertensive population. Arterial stiffness is an important determinant of cardiovascular performance and a predictor of the corresponding risk. The association of fibrinogen and PAI-1 with arterial stiffness in hypertensive patients has not been defined.

Methods: We studied 285 consecutive, non-diabetic patients with uncomplicated, never treated essential hypertension (mean age 50 years, 184 males). Carotid-femoral and carotid-radial pulse wave velocity (PWVc-f and PWVc-r) were measured as indices of elastic-type, large-artery (aortic) stiffness and muscular type, medium-sized arterial stiffness respectively. Serum PAI-1 and plasma fibrinogen were measured in all participants.

Results: Across the tertiles of fibrinogen, we found a significant increase in PWVc-f (7.36 vs 7.52 vs 8.17m/s at tertiles 1 to 3, p < 0.001) but not in PWVc-r as well (8.73 vs 8.70 vs 8.68 m/s, p = NS). Across the tertiles of logPAI-1 was also a gradual increase in PWVc-f (7.43 vs 7.73 vs 7.93 m/s, p = 0.02) but no significant difference was observed in PWVc-r levels (8.57 vs 8.82 vs 8.74m/s, p = NS). In multivariate analysis, the association of fibrinogen with PWVc-f remained significant (β = 0.12, p < 0.05) after adjustment for age, gender, systolic blood pressure, smoking, body mass index, HbA1c and serum cholesterol. However, the associations of PAI-1 with PWVc-f disappeared once the above confounding factors were taken into account.

Conclusion: The present study shows that in hypertensive subjects increased aortic stiffness is related to increased plasma levels of fibrinogen. This finding may have important implications for hypertensive patients.

Journal
Artery Research
Volume-Issue
1 - S1
Pages
S42 - S42
Publication Date
2007/06/13
ISSN (Online)
1876-4401
ISSN (Print)
1872-9312
DOI
10.1016/S1872-9312(07)70084-4How to use a DOI?
Open Access
This is an open access article distributed under the CC BY-NC license.

Cite this article

TY  - JOUR
AU  - C. Vlachopoulos*
AU  - P. Pietri
AU  - K. Aznaouridis
AU  - G. Vyssoulis
AU  - D. Adamopoulos
AU  - S.M. Kyvelou
AU  - P. Tapinis
AU  - C. Liakos
AU  - C. Stefanadis
PY  - 2007
DA  - 2007/06/13
TI  - P.061 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FIBRINOGEN AND ARTERIAL STIFFNESS IN PATIENTS WITH ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION
JO  - Artery Research
SP  - S42
EP  - S42
VL  - 1
IS  - S1
SN  - 1876-4401
UR  - https://doi.org/10.1016/S1872-9312(07)70084-4
DO  - 10.1016/S1872-9312(07)70084-4
ID  - Vlachopoulos*2007
ER  -