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Mid- to Late-Life Time-Averaged Cumulative Blood Pressure and Late-Life Retinal Microvasculature: The ARIC Study.

Yiquan HuangHuimin ZhouShao-Zhao ZhangXiangbin ZhongYifen LinZhenyu XiongMenghui LiuAili YimamuOdong ChristopherZiwei ZhouXiao-Dong ZhuangXin-Xue Liao
Published in: Journal of the American Heart Association (2022)
Background The associations of time-averaged cumulative blood pressure (BP) from midlife to late life with microvasculature expressed as retinal vessel diameters is not well studied. The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of cumulative systolic BP and diastolic BP (DBP) with retinal vessel calibers, focusing on race differences. Methods and Results The analysis included 1818 adults from the ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) study attending the fifth visit (2011-2013; age 77±5 years, 17.1% Black participants). Time-averaged cumulative BPs were calculated as the sum of averaged BPs from adjacent consecutive visits (visits 1-5) indexed to total observation time (24±1 years). Summarized estimates for central retinal arteriolar equivalent and central retinal venular equivalent at the fifth visit represent average retinal vessel diameters. The arteriole:venule ratio was calculated. We tested for effect modification by race. Results from multiple linear regression models suggested that higher time-averaged cumulative DBP (β [95% CI] per 1-SD increase: -1.78 [-2.53, -1.02], P <0.001 and -0.005 [-0.009, -0.002], P =0.004, respectively) but not systolic BP (-0.52 [-1.30, 0.26], P =0.189 and 0.001 [-0.002, 0.005], P =0.485, respectively) was associated with smaller central retinal arteriolar equivalent and arteriole:venule ratio. The association between time-averaged cumulative DBP and arteriole:venule ratio was strongest in White participants (interaction P =0.007). The association of cumulative systolic BP and DBP with central retinal venular equivalent was strongest in Black participants (interaction P =0.015 and 0.011, respectively). Conclusions Exposure to higher BP levels, particularly DBP, from midlife to late life is associated with narrower retinal vessel diameters in late life. Furthermore, race moderated the association of cumulative BP exposure with retinal microvasculature.
Keyphrases
  • optical coherence tomography
  • blood pressure
  • diabetic retinopathy
  • optic nerve
  • left ventricular
  • heart failure
  • hypertensive patients
  • cardiovascular disease
  • heart rate
  • insulin resistance
  • data analysis