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Low Pulse Pressure as a Predictor of Death in Patients with Mild to Advanced Heart Failure
Authors:Tansel Yildiran  Mevlut Koc  Abdi Bozkurt  Durmus Yildiray Sahin  Ilker Unal  Esmeray Acarturk
Affiliation:Departments of Cardiology (Drs. Acarturk, Bozkurt, Sahin, and Yildiran) and Biostatistics (Dr. Unal), Medical Faculty, Cukurova University, 01330 Adana; and Department of Cardiology (Dr. Koc), Adana Numune Education & Research Hospital, 01150 Adana; Turkey
Abstract:
The prognostic value of pulse pressure has been investigated in heart-failure patients. Low pulse pressure in advanced heart failure and high pulse pressure in mild heart failure have been separately linked to increased mortality rates. We prospectively investigated an association between pulse pressure and 2-year cardiovascular death in an entire heart-failure population.We prospectively enrolled 225 heart-failure patients (New York Heart Association [NYHA] functional class, I–IV; mean age, 56.5 ± 12.3 yr; 188 men). The patients'' blood pressures were measured in accordance with recommended guidelines. Pulse pressures were calculated as the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure values. The patients were monitored for a mean period of 670 ± 42 days for the occurrence of cardiovascular death.All patients were divided into quartiles according to their pulse pressures (<35, 35–45, 46–55, and >55 mmHg). Pulse pressure decreased as NYHA class worsened (P <0.001). Patients in the <35-mmHg quartile had the lowest plasma sodium concentrations, left ventricular ejection fractions, and systolic myocardial velocities upon echocardiography; and the highest left ventricular dimensions, early diastolic/late diastolic filling velocity ratios, and peak early/peak late diastolic myocardial velocity ratios. Pulse pressure independently predicted death in the patients with advanced heart failure and in the entire population. Upon receiver operating characteristic analysis, a 30-mmHg cutoff value for pulse pressure predicted death with 83.7% sensitivity and 79.7% specificity.Pulse pressure is easily calculated and enables the prediction of cardiovascular death in patients with mild to advanced heart failure. Pulse pressure can be used reliably as a prognostic marker in clinical practice.Key words: Blood pressure/physiology, cardiovascular diseases/mortality/physiopathology, epidemiologic methods, heart failure/epidemiology/etiology/physiopathology, multivariate analysis, predictive value of tests, prospective studies, pulse/physiology, reference values, risk factorsPulse pressure (PP) is the difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP) values. Pulse pressure markedly rises after the 5th decade of life, due to arterial stiffening with increasing age.1,2 Several studies have shown a close relationship between high PP and the occurrence of cardiovascular (CV) death.3-5 Furthermore, high PP is a risk factor for the development of coronary heart disease, myocardial infarction, and heart failure in normotensive and hypertensive persons.6-10Data regarding the prognostic value of PP in patients with heart failure are limited and controversial. The importance of PP was investigated in 2 large studies. The SAVE11 (Survival and Ventricular Enlargement) trial revealed a worse prognosis in patients with high PP and symptomatic or asymptomatic left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction. The SOLVD12 (Studies of Left Ventricular Dysfunction) trial found that high PP independently predicted total and CV death in mild heart failure. However, in both studies, patients in New York Heart Association (NYHA) functional classes I and II constituted most of the population, and few patients had advanced heart failure (NYHA classes III and IV). In other studies involving patients with advanced heart failure, low PP was associated with high CV mortality rates.13-16 We believed that further study was warranted in order to elucidate the prognostic value of PP in an entire heart-failure population. Accordingly, we investigated the association between PP and 2-year CV death in patients in whom the severity of heart failure ranged from mild to advanced.
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