The overall goals of this project are to characterize the determinants of vascular structure and function, and evaluate their effects on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality 1. We recently examined the predictive role of pulse wave velocity (PWV), a non-invasive marker of vascular stiffness. In a cross-sectional study involving 504 Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging (BLSA) participants who were free of cardiovascular disease at baseline, and with an average follow-up of 6.2 years, we found that PWV was a predictor of cardiovascular events (defined as cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction, revascularization, or stroke) and of total mortality. However, when other factors known to influence cardiovascular morbidity and mortality were entered into the Cox proportional hazards model, PWV was no longer an independent predictor of outcomes, suggesting that increased stiffness may represent a mechanism through which the significant variables (namely age, fasting blood sugar, and white blood cells) exert their deleterious effects on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality 2. In order to investigate the hypothesis that the age-associated changes in cardiovascular structure and function represent the mechanism through which increased age exerts its deleterious effects on cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, and to test the related hypothesis that physiologic vascular properties explain the chronologic age-associated increased risk of atherosclerosis, we plan to evaluate traditional as well as novel measures of vascular properties, and examine how they relate to non-invasive assessments of atherosclerosis. This will be performed in 300 BLSA subjects as well as individuals with known absence of coronary artery disease and patients with known premature coronary artery disease. A research and development contract has been awarded to procure novel non-invasive imaging tools such as electron beam computed tomography, vascular magnetic resonance imaging, and vascular magnetic resonance angiography (Project Officer, S. Najjar). 3. Although it is thought that the relationship between central and peripheral pulse pressure changes with advancing age, this has not been systematically investigated in a large cohort. This is important because peripheral pulse pressure, a surrogate measure of vascular stiffness, has recently been shown in numerous studies to be an independent predictor of adverse outcomes. If the difference between peripheral and central pulse pressure decreases with age, this would suggest that peripheral pulse pressure underestimates the risk of adverse outcomes in older individuals. We are therefore determining the central aortic pressures in a large cohort of BLSA individuals across a broad age-range, by analyzing carotid arterial pulse wave contours obtained non-invasively by the technique of applanation tonometry with high fidelity micromanometer probes. 4. Previous studies from the Laboratory of Cardiovascular Science had previously shown that a novel nonenzymatic breaker of advanced glycation end-products, ALT-711, improves vascular stiffness and lowers pulse pressure in humans with increased vascular stiffness, and that it improves both arterial and ventricular function and optimizes ventriculo-vascular coupling in old healthy monkeys. We are presently participating in a multi-center, phase II, randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled study that evaluates, in a formal dose-finding study, the safety and efficacy of ALT-711 in reducing blood pressure in subjects with isolated systolic hypertension, which is the most common form of hypertension that afflicts older individuals. 5. Congestive heart failure is a clinical syndrome whose prevalence and incidence are increasing, especially in older individuals. We hypothesize that increased vascular stiffness, by accentuating the ventriculo-vacular mismatch, adversely affects the already compromised cardiovascular performance. L-arginine, but not its enantiomer D-arginine, is the substrate for nitric oxide synthase, the enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of nitric oxide, which, in turn, decreases vascular stiffness, hastens ventricular diastolic relaxation and enhances diastolic distensibility. We are therefore investigating, in a randomized double-blinded cross-over study, the acute vascular and diastolic ventricular effects of parenteral L-arginine and D-arginine administration in patients with heart failure and increased vascular stiffness, and evaluating whether these effects favorably impact cardiovascular performance.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Intramural Research (Z01)
Project #
1Z01AG000856-01
Application #
6674196
Study Section
(LCS)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Aging
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
State
Country
United States
Zip Code
Scuteri, Angelo; Morrell, Christopher H; Najjar, Samer S et al. (2009) Longitudinal paths to the metabolic syndrome: can the incidence of the metabolic syndrome be predicted? The Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 64:590-8
Lakatta, Edward G; Wang, Mingyi; Najjar, Samer S (2009) Arterial aging and subclinical arterial disease are fundamentally intertwined at macroscopic and molecular levels. Med Clin North Am 93:583-604, Table of Contents
Chantler, Paul D; Lakatta, Edward G (2009) Role of body size on cardiovascular function: can we see the meat through the fat? Hypertension 54:459-61
Waldstein, Shari R; Rice, S Carrington; Thayer, Julian F et al. (2008) Pulse pressure and pulse wave velocity are related to cognitive decline in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. Hypertension 51:99-104
Stein, James H; Korcarz, Claudia E; Hurst, R Todd et al. (2008) Use of carotid ultrasound to identify subclinical vascular disease and evaluate cardiovascular disease risk: a consensus statement from the American Society of Echocardiography Carotid Intima-Media Thickness Task Force. Endorsed by the Society for Vascula J Am Soc Echocardiogr 21:93-111;quiz 189-90
Najjar, Samer S; Scuteri, Angelo; Shetty, Veena et al. (2008) Pulse wave velocity is an independent predictor of the longitudinal increase in systolic blood pressure and of incident hypertension in the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging. J Am Coll Cardiol 51:1377-83
Scuteri, A; Vuga, M; Najjar, S S et al. (2008) Education eclipses ethnicity in predicting the development of the metabolic syndrome in different ethnic groups in midlife: the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN). Diabet Med 25:1390-9
Melenovsky, Vojtech; Borlaug, Barry A; Rosen, Boaz et al. (2007) Cardiovascular features of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction versus nonfailing hypertensive left ventricular hypertrophy in the urban Baltimore community: the role of atrial remodeling/dysfunction. J Am Coll Cardiol 49:198-207
Spaeder, Jeffrey; Najjar, Samer S; Gerstenblith, Gary et al. (2006) Rapid titration of carvedilol in patients with congestive heart failure: a randomized trial of automated telemedicine versus frequent outpatient clinic visits. Am Heart J 151:844.e1-10
Anderson, David E; Metter, E Jeffrey; Hougaku, Hidetaka et al. (2006) Suppressed anger is associated with increased carotid arterial stiffness in older adults. Am J Hypertens 19:1129-34

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