Abstract

Arterial stiffness, echolucency and texture features are altered with hypertension and associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk. The relationship between these markers and structural and load-dependent artery wall changes in hypertension are poorly understood. The Multi-ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) is a longitudinal study of 6814 adults from six communities across the United States designed to study subclinical cardiovascular disease. From B-mode imaging of the right common carotid artery at the baseline MESA examination, we calculated carotid artery Young's elastic modulus (YEM, n=5894) and carotid artery gray-scale texture features (n=1403). The standard YEM calculation represented total arterial stiffness. Structural stiffness was calculated by adjusting YEM to a standard blood pressure of 120/80 mm Hg with participant-specific models. Load-dependent stiffness was the difference between total and structural stiffness. We found that load-dependent YEM was elevated in hypertensive individuals compared with normotensive individuals (35.7 ± 105.5 vs. -62.0 ± 112.4 kPa, p < 0.001) but that structural YEM was similar (425.3 ± 274.8 vs. 428.4 ± 293.0 kPa, p=0.60). Gray-scale measures of heterogeneity in carotid artery wall texture (gray-level difference statistic contrast) had small but statistically signification correlations with carotid artery stiffness mechanisms. This association was positive for structural YEM (0.107, p < 0.001), while for load-dependent YEM, the association was negative (-0.064, p=0.02). In conclusion, increased arterial stiffness in hypertension was owing solely to the non-linear mechanics of having higher blood pressure, not structural changes in the artery wall, and high load-dependent stiffness was associated with a more homogenous carotid artery wall texture. This is potentially related to arterial remodeling associated with subclinical atherosclerosis and future cardiovascular disease development. These results also indicate that gray-scale texture features from ultrasound imaging had a small but statistically significant association with load-dependent arterial stiffness and that gray-scale texture features may be partially load dependent.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call