IJCS | Volume 33, Nº4, July and August 2020

DOI: https://doi.org/10.36660/ijcs.20200132 Deaths from cardiovascular disease, according to the WHO, are projected to reach around 14 million by 2030. The global population is aging at an accelerated rate and the prevalence of arterial hypertension (AH) increases with advancing age. 1 Aging is the common denominator in several cardiovascular diseases. Arterial stiffness and increased pulse wave velocity (PWV), as well as central systolic pressure are major predictors of cardiovascular events. (Figure 1) 2 Arterial stiffness reflects the true arterial wall damage of risk factors, and it increases with aging. On the other hand, mean blood pressure (MBP), glycemia and lipids are circulating markers whose values fluctuate along the follow-up of patients. Thus, measuring circulating biomarkers at a certain time may give only a snapshot and not the whole history of arterial wall damage. As shown in Figure 2, the gray zone before the time at measurement, when the risk assessment of a hypothetical patient is done, represents a period of life when circulating biomarkers may present altered values and, consequently, aggression to the vascular wall, interchanged with periods of good control of circulating biomarkers. This indicates that, most often, the physician does not know the amount of exposure to CV risk factors that a patient presents throughout life. Because risk scores perform a cross-sectional analysis of a single moment, they may not be able to quantify the overall cardiovascular and residual risks of each patient. However, the evaluation of arterial stiffness expresses the sum of all the aggressions caused by circulating markers on the arterial wall over time and, for this reason, it expresses more accurately the future risk of a CV event or death. 2 (Figure 2) Further assessment and stratification of risk, in addition to the biomarkers already established, such as blood pressure (BP), blood glucose, cholesterol and carotid intima-media thickness, must provide a better and cost-effective risk prediction. Therefore, a study investigated whether a 1 m/s increase in PWV was associated with a 7% increased risk of a cardiovascular event for a 60 year old man. 3 In addition, the altered behavior of central hemodynamic parameters, such as central systolic blood pressure (cSBP) and the (heart rate-corrected) augmentation index (AI), is influenced by arterial stiffness and plays a crucial role in the interface between the traditional cardiovascular continuum vascular and aging continuum, which represents the current view of the pathophysiology of cardiovascular diseases. 4-6 In addition to cardiovascular impairment, another concern related to aging is cognition. A review showed that arterial stiffness severity was positively correlated with cognitive impairment. The mechanisms may be associated with greater arterial pulsatility, damaging the cerebral microcirculation, which causes various phenomena associated with cerebral small vessel diseases. It may also be associated with reductions in white matter and gray matter integrity, medial temporal lobe atrophy and Aβ protein deposition. 7 Emerging evidence suggests that frailty is a risk factor for CVD. Individuals are considered frail if they present at least three out of these five items: unintentional weight loss of ≥10 lbs within a year, self-reported exhaustion, weakness as measured by grip strength, slow walking speed, and decreased physical activity. High frailty levels are associatedwith increased stiffness. 8 357 EDITORIAL International Journal of Cardiovascular Sciences. 2020; 33(4):357-359 Mailing Address: Erika Maria Gonçalves Campana Rua São Januário, 159 / 1103 B. Postal Code: 24130386, Fonseca - Niterói, RJ - Brazil. E-mail: erikamaria@cardiol.br , campanaemg@predialnet.com.br Vascular Aging and Arterial Stiffness in Older Adults Erika Maria Gonçalves Campana 1, 2 a nd Sayuri Inuzuka 2, 3 Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), 1 Rio de Janeiro, RJ – Brazil. Universidade de Nova Iguaçu, 2 Rio de Janeiro, RJ – Brazil. Universidade Federal de Goiás (UFG), 3 Goiás, GO – Brazil. Editorial related to the article: Determinants of Arterial Stiffness and Vascular Aging in the Older Adult Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality; Hypertension; Vascular stiffness; Risk factors; Biomarkers; Blood Pressure; Aged; Frailty; Pulse Wave Analyses. Keywords

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