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Hypertension in the elderly: Age- and disease-related complications and therapeutic implications
Authors:Edward G Lakatta MD  Jerome D Cohen  Jerome L Fleg  Edward D Frohlich  Alan H Gradman
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science, Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, 4940 Eastern Avenue, 21224 Baltimore, MD;(2) Preventive Cardiology Programs, St. Louis University, St. Louis, MO;(3) Alton Ochsner Medical Foundation, New Orleans, LA;(4) Division of Cardiovascular Disease, The Western Pennsylvania Hospital, Pittsburgh, PA
Abstract:Summary Effective treatment of hypertension in the elderly requires an understanding of both the progressive course of the disease and the impact of aging on the cardiovascular system, including physiological, genetic, lifestyle, and environmental factors. Review of the literature that has attempted to define the impact of an ldquoaging processrdquo on cardiovascular structure and function reveals a diversity of findings and interpretations. However, in general, normotensive elderly subjects exhibit the heart and vascular characteristics of ldquomutedrdquo hypertension, including many features of younger hypertensive patients: cardiac hypertrophy, diminution in resting left ventricular early diastolic filling rate, increased arterial stiffness and aortic impedance, diminution in the baroreceptor reflex, a diminished response to catecholamines and diminished renal blood flow, and an increase in peripheral vascular resistance (PVR). Treatment of elderly hypertensives is more challenging because of the greater likelihood of the presence of concomitant diseases, most importantly, coronary and peripheral atherosclerosis, renal dysfunction, and diabetes mellitus. Isolated systolic hypertension (ISH), the most common form of hypertension in the elderly, has also been clearly shown to be an important predictor of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, including coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, and stroke. Treatment of ISH has been shown to lower systolic pressure safely and effectively in the elderly. By reducing PVR, and possibly the arterial stiffness, and thus the early reflected pulse waves, vasodilators, including calcium antagonists, may lower these three components of arterial impedance, and hence lower the arterial load on the heart. The cardiac hypertrophy and reduced left ventricular filling rate associated with hypertension in older individuals can also be ameliorated, to some extent, by calcium channel blockers.Proceedings of a symposium held in Atlanta, Georgia on March 2, 1991.
Keywords:elderly hypertensive  cardiac hypertrophy  peripheral vascular resistance  arterial impedance  therapeutic considerations
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