Abstract 044: Sex Differences in Relative Contributions of Hemodynamic Parameters to Blood Pressure: A Population-based Study of Adolescents and Middle-aged Adults [Session Title: Gender Differences and Sex Hormones]

Hypertension is a leading cause of death. Sex differences in blood pressure (BP) and hypertension prevalence emerge during adolescence and remain throughout reproductive age. Sex differences in BP-underlying hemodynamics, i.e., in the relative contributions of stroke volume (SV), total peripheral resistance (TPR) and heart rate (HR) to BP, have not been investigated in these age categories in a population-based setting. We studied a cohort of 1,347 individuals, including 911 adolescents (12-18 years, 52 % female) and 426 young to middle-aged adults (36-65 years, 56 % female). Beat-by-beat systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP), together with HR, SV, and TPR, were measured with a Finometer throughout a 52-min protocol; the protocol was intended to “mimic” daily-life activities, such as changes in posture and mental stress. It is well established that BP during regular daily activities (ambulatory BP monitoring) is a better predictor of target-organ damage than standard office BP. The relative contributions of HR, SV and TPR to SBP and DBP were determined by decomposing the model-explained variance into non-negative contributions. The relative contributions of SV, TPR and HR to SBP and DBP showed marked sex differences in young and middle-aged adults. The main determinant of higher SBP was SV in females (55 [50-60] % in females vs. only 35 [30-40] % in males), whereas it was TPR in males (47 [41-52] % in males vs. only 30 [26-34] % in females). The main determinant of hig...
Source: Hypertension - Category: Cardiology Authors: Tags: Oral Abstract Presentations Source Type: research