1. Peak Systolic Blood Pressure During the Exercise Test: Reference Values by Sex and Age and Association With Mortality
- Author
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Thomas G. Allison, Maria Irene Barillas-Lara, Ahmad Alhamid, Carl J. Pepine, Sonia Fortin-Gamero, Ahmad Al-Mouakeh, Yazan Assaf, Ahmad Barout, and Amanda R. Bonikowske
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blood Pressure ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Reference Values ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Association (psychology) ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Age Factors ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Test (assessment) ,Blood pressure ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Reference values ,Exercise Test ,Cardiology ,Female ,business - Abstract
We sought to update norms for peak systolic blood pressure (SBP) on the graded exercise test and examine its prognostic value in patients without baseline cardiovascular disease. Mayo graded exercise test data (1993–2010) were reviewed for nonimaging tests using Bruce protocol, selecting Minnesota residents 30 to 79 years without baseline cardiovascular disease. We formed a pure cohort of patients without factors significantly affecting peak SBP to determine peak SBP percentile norms by age and sex. Then we divided the full cohort of patients into 5 groups based on peak SBP percentiles: low (90th). The relationship between peak SBP and mortality was tested using Cox regression adjusting for age, sex, and comorbidities affecting peak SBP or mortality. We identified 20 760 eligible patients with 7313 females (35%) and mean age 51.5±10.7 years. Our pure cohort included 7810 patients. Over 12.5±5.0 years follow-up, there were 1582 deaths, including 541 cardiovascular deaths. In the fully adjusted model, low-peak SBP was associated with increased total mortality (heart rate, 1.41 [1.19–1.66], P P =0.001), while borderline low-peak SBP was associated with increased cardiovascular mortality only (heart rate, 1.36 [1.02–1.81], P =0.027). High peak SBP was associated with increased total mortality only in the age-sex adjusted model (heart rate, 1.18 [1.02–1.36], P =0.026), not after full adjustment. We conclude that low exercise peak SBP is an independent predictor of higher total and cardiovascular mortality.
- Published
- 2021
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