Vascular Aging and Central Aortic Blood Pressure. From Pathophysiology to Treatment
Large conductive arteries undergo to structural modifications by aging, eventually leading to increased vascular stiffness. As consequence, cardiovascular hemodynamic changes by increasing central blood pressure which may be also associated to the remodelling of peripheral resistance arteries that contribute to increase further the central vascular stiffness and blood pressure. These modifications resemble the ones that has been shown in essential hypertension, thus a condition of “early vascular aging” has been described in hypertensive patients. Since hypertension related target organs, particularly the heart, face aortic blood pressure rather than brachial blood pressure, it has been recently suggested that central blood pressure and other parameters of large arteries’ stiffness, including pulse wave velocity (PWV), may better correlate with subclinical organ damage and might be useful to assess the cardiovascular risk of patients beyond the traditional risk factors. Different devices have been validated to measure central blood pressure and PWV, and are currently available for clinical use. The increasing application of these tools in clinical practice could improve the management of hypertensive patients by better defining the cardiovascular risk and address the antihypertensive therapy.