Abstract

Abstract Background The impact of smoking on atherosclerosis progression is greater in patients with arterial hypertension. High blood pressure (BP) is a major determinant of increased aortic stiffness which is an independent predictor of cardiovascular events. Aim of this study was to examine whether there are differences between office BP categorization and aortic stiffness on the basis of smoking status. Methods We measured carotid-femoral pulse wave (PWV) in 185 men (mean age: 55±10 years) who were not receiving antihypertensive medications and they had no history of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The cohort was divided into three groups according to office systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP): normal (SBP <130 and DBP <85 mmHg, n=79), high normal (130≤SBP<140 or DBP 85≤DBP<90mmHg, n=42), and hypertension (SBP≥140 or DBP≥90mmHg, n=64). Results The three groups had similar age and metabolic parameters (body mass index, fasting blood glucose and LDL-C). PWV progressively increased from normotensive to high normal BP, and to hypertensive patients (7.8±1.4 vs 8.2±1.4 vs 8.6±1.6 m/s, respectively, overall P<0.01). Then we subdivided the three office BP groups into subgroups according to smoking status. Figure shows PWV of the three groups stratified by smoking status. The three subgroups of smokers had similar tobacco exposure (40 pack-years). There were not statistically significant differences between smokers and non smokers in each office BP category with regard to age and metabolic parameters. In separate analysis, among individuals with either normal BP the association of smoking status with PWV level was not significant. However, in hypertensive patients but also in patients with high normal BP, smoking status was significantly correlated with PWV (all P<0.01). Furthermore, the differences in mean PWV between smokers with high normal BP and patients with hypertension were not statistically significant reflecting a detrimental effect of smoking on aortic stiffness among males with high normal BP. Conclusion Smoking has an unfavorable effect on aortic elastic properties in men with high normal BP. The smokers with high normal BP have PWV comparable to that of hypertensive patients. This finding imply that smoking cessation should be a premising non pharmacological intervention in men with high-normal BP and increased aortic stiffness who are considered to be at a higher cardiovascular risk. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None. Smoking, BP categories and PWV

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