Predictive Value of Arterial Blood Pressure in Old Age
- 12 January 1983
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Acta Medica Scandinavica
- Vol. 214 (4) , 285-294
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0954-6820.1983.tb10636.x
Abstract
In a 10‐year longitudinal study of men and women aged exactly 70 at entry and otherwise only selected according to geography, the predictive value of arterial blood pressure was evaluated concerning cardiovascular disease (CVD) at entry and CVD development or death during the following decade. At 70 the prevalence of arterial hypertension (≤ 160/95 mmHg) was 46% in men and 45% in women. At 80 these prevalences were 19 and 30%, respectively. In women, this fall could partly be explained by an association between high blood pressure and excess mortality. In both sexes it could partly be explained by an increasing part of the population being treated with antihypertensives/diuretics, partly by an association with myocardial degnereration. In a Cox's regression model for competing risks at 70, high systolic blood pressure had independent, predictive value for excess CVD mortality in the eighth decade in women alone, and for excess CVD development in both sexes. High diastolic blood pressure had no independent predicitive value for any of these end points.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identifying subsets of major risk factors in multivariate estimation of coronary riskJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1977
- Components of blood pressure and risk of atherothrombotic brain infarction: the Framingham study.Stroke, 1976
- Clinical myocardial infarction over a five-year period — III. A multivariate analysis of incidence, the Israel Ischemic Heart Disease StudyJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1975
- Screening for Hypertension: Some Epidemiological ObservationsBMJ, 1974
- Multivariate Analysis of Risk Factors for Coronary Heart DiseaseCirculation, 1973
- Systolic versus diastolic blood pressure and risk of coronary heart diseaseThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1971
- Diagnostic Application of the133Xenon Method in Peripheral Arterial DiseaseScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1965
- Diagnostic Application of the 133Xenon Method in Peripheral Arterial DiseaseScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1965
- MEASUREMENT OF BLOOD-FLOW THROUGH SKELETAL MUSCLE BY INTRAMUSCULAR INJECTION OF XENON-133The Lancet, 1964
- THE EFFECTS OF AGING AND DEGENERATIVE VASCULAR DISEASE ON THE MEASUREMENT OF ARTERIAL RIGIDITY IN MAN*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1961