Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in the Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Management of Resistant Hypertension: Still a Matter of our Resistance?Lazaridis, Antonios; Sarafidis, Pantelis; Ruilope, Luis
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0590-9pmid: 26277726
Resistant hypertension, commonly described as the failure to achieve goal blood pressure (BP) despite an appropriate regimen of three antihypertensive drugs at the maximal tolerated doses, one of which is diuretic, is increasingly recognized as an important problem of public health. Large population studies with office measurements suggest that the prevalence of resistance hypertension is approximately at 6–12 % of the general hypertensive population and 8–28 % of treated hypertensives. However, these estimations do not take into account factors of pseudo-resistance, most importantly, the white-coat effect that can be effectively ruled out with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM). Recent studies have clearly shown that when ABPM is used, at least 30–35 % of patients labeled as “resistant hypertensives” turn out to have well-controlled BP on ambulatory basis, a finding changing entirely the estimates of prevalence of resistance hypertension and actual patient handling. Furthermore, current evidence suggests that ABPM is a much more accurate predictor of cardiovascular events in resistant hypertension compared to office BP and thus can offer a better risk stratification for these high-risk individuals. Finally, ABPM offers the potential of a better evaluation of the effect of pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic therapeutic interventions. This review attempts to summarize recent evidence on the advantages of ABPM in the diagnosis, prognosis, and management of resistant hypertension.
Influence of Physical Activity on Hypertension and Cardiac Structure and FunctionHegde, Sheila; Solomon, Scott
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0588-3pmid: 26277725
The global burden of hypertension is rising and accounts for substantial morbidity and mortality. Lifestyle factors such as diet and physical inactivity contribute to this burden, further highlighting the need for prevention efforts to curb this public health epidemic. Regular physical activity is associated with lower blood pressure, reduced cardiovascular risk, and cardiac remodeling. While exercise and hypertension can both be associated with the development of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), the cardiac remodeling from hypertension is pathologic with an associated increase in myocyte hypertrophy, fibrosis, and risk of heart failure and mortality, whereas LVH in athletes is generally non-pathologic and lacks the fibrosis seen in hypertension. In hypertensive patients, physical activity has been associated with paradoxical regression or prevention of LVH, suggesting a mechanism by which exercise can benefit hypertensive patients. Further studies are needed to better understand the mechanisms underlying the benefits of physical activity in the hypertensive heart.
Role of the Sympathetic Nervous System in Stress-Mediated Cardiovascular DiseaseHering, Dagmara; Lachowska, Kamila; Schlaich, Markus
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0594-5pmid: 26318888
A high incidence of acute cardiovascular events and sudden cardiac death following unexpected acute emotional stress or a natural catastrophic disaster has been well-documented over the past decades. Chronic psychosocial factors have been shown to be directly linked to the development of hypertension, cardiovascular disease and stroke. Activation of various neurogenic pathways is an important mediator of acute and chronic stress-induced hypertension and heart disease. Heightened sympathetic activation has been shown to be a critical contributor linking psychogenic effects on cardiovascular regulation to serious and often fatal CV outcomes. Accordingly, several therapeutic approaches that attenuate autonomic imbalance via modulation of increased sympathetic outflow by either non-pharmacological or interventional means have been shown to alleviate clinical symptoms. Likewise stress reduction per se achieved with transcendental medicine has been linked to improved patient outcomes. Therapies that oppose adrenergic activity and/or have the potential to attenuate negative emotions are likely to reduce cardiovascular risk and its adverse consequences attributable to chronic mental stress.
Exercise, the Brain, and HypertensionPeri-Okonny, Poghni; Fu, Qi; Zhang, Rong; Vongpatanasin, Wanpen
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0593-6pmid: 26341655
Exercise training is the cornerstone in the prevention and management of hypertension and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. However, blood pressure (BP) response to exercise is exaggerated in hypertension often to the range that raises the safety concern, which may prohibit patients from regular exercise. This augmented pressor response is shown to be related to excessive sympathetic stimulation caused by overactive muscle reflex. Exaggerated sympathetic-mediated vasoconstriction further contributes to the rise in BP during exercise in hypertension. Exercise training has been shown to reduce both exercise pressor reflex and attenuate the abnormal vasoconstriction. Hypertension also contributes to cognitive impairment, and exercise training has been shown to improve cognitive function through both BP-dependent and BP-independent pathways. Additional studies are still needed to determine if newer modes of exercise training such as high-intensity interval training may offer advantages over traditional continuous moderate training in improving BP and brain health in hypertensive patients.
Antihypertensive Therapies and Cognitive Function: a ReviewKherada, Nisharahmed; Heimowitz, Todd; Rosendorff, Clive
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0592-7pmid: 26298567
Increasing life expectancy has made old age-related health problems like dementia and cognitive decline more prevalent, and these are rapidly becoming important causes of disability and poor quality of life, causing significant add-ons to health-care costs worldwide. Hypertension is the most important modifiable vascular risk factor for the development and progression of both cognitive decline and dementia. In many observational and randomized studies, antihypertensive therapies have been shown to be beneficial in slowing cognitive decline. However, due to observed discrepancies by these studies, there is a lack of consensus on the best antihypertensive strategy for the prevention or slowing of cognitive decline. It is also not clear whether the beneficial effect of antihypertensive therapy is due to the use of a specific class of agents or combination therapy. Thus, we present a comprehensive review of overall antihypertensive therapies and cognition and of the individual antihypertensive therapy classes with their specific protective mechanisms and available clinical evidence behind their effect on cognitive function.
Review of New Statistical Techniques for Analysis of Cardiovascular Trial and Registry DataAmaratunga, Dhammika; Cabrera, Javier
doi: 10.1007/s11906-015-0591-8pmid: 26323874
Cardiovascular research generates a large variety of data including big and small datasets that pose interesting challenges to researchers in biomedical statistics. This paper covers a number of important methodology issues and the solutions that have been applied so far to try to solve them. The first issue is multiple testing and the use of false discovery rates to correct for multiplicity. This is illustrated with an application related to genotyping heart diseases. The second is measuring life extension at present and in the future. The third one is the issue of U and J curves and the questions they present. Finally, this paper studies visit-to-visit blood pressure variability as a predictor of cardiovascular events.