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AJH 2002; 15:1096 –1100 Differential Effects of Antihypertensive Drug Therapy on Arterial Compliance Lawrence M. Resnick and Melvin H. Lester Although vascular compliance, ⌬V/⌬P, is abnormal in essential hypertension and can be improved by antihypertensive drug therapy, it is not clear whether drug-induced changes in compliance are attributable solely to lower achieved blood pressure (BP), and thus equally likely with different drugs possessing similar antihypertensive efficacy. Therefore, we used computerized arterial pulse waveform analysis (CAPWA) to measure capacitive (C1) and oscillatory (C2) components of arterial compliance in essential hypertensive subjects (n ⫽ 39) before, and 1 and 3 months after achieving normotensive BP values with administration of either dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonists (CaBl, n ⫽ 11), converting enzyme inhibitors (CEI, n ⫽ 9), angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB, n ⫽ 9), or -blockers (BBl, n ⫽ 10). Despite equivalent effects on BP (CaBl: ⫺19 ⫾ 4/⫺15 ⫾ 2 mm Hg; CEI: ⫺12 ⫾ 3/⫺13 ⫾ 2 mm Hg; ARB: ⫺10 ⫾ 3/⫺12 ⫾ 2 mm Hg; and BBl: ⫺14 ⫾ 3/⫺12 ⫾ 2 mm C Hg; P ⬍ .005 for each drug v pretreatment), CaBl, CEI, and ARB significantly increased arterial compliance (CaBl: %⌬C1 ⫽ 30.0 ⫾ 5.8, %⌬ C2 ⫽ 43.7 ⫾ 23.3; CEI: %⌬C1 ⫽ 32.7 ⫾ 5.4, %⌬C2 ⫽ 26.7 ⫾ 7.1; ARB: %⌬C1 ⫽ 36.3 ⫾ 11.8, %⌬C2 ⫽ 43.6 ⫾ 23.1; P ⬍ .01 for CaBl, CEI, and ARB v pretreatment), but BBl did not (%⌬C1 ⫽ ⫺3.9 ⫾ 7.6, %⌬C2 ⫽ ⫺7.0 ⫾ 11.5, P ⫽ not significant v pretreatment, sig ⫽ 0.01 v other drugs). We conclude that for an equivalent effect on BP, arterial compliance improves after therapy with some, but not all antihypertensive drugs. We hypothesize that a greater clinical benefit may result from the preferential use of drugs that concomitantly improve arterial compliance. Am J Hypertens 2002;15:1096 –1100 © 2002 American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd. Key Words: Arterial compliance, arterial stiffness, pulse waveform analysis, drug therapy. urrent recommendations for the evaluation and treatment of hypertension are defined in terms of blood pressure (BP) measurements.1 However, hypertension is clinically heterogeneous, and similar BP values are associated with different vascular consequences in different patients. Although target organ assessment of the heart and kidneys may better predict clinical outcomes, management decisions are usually made without further physical assessment of the tissue most directly affected by hypertension, ie, blood vessels. Measurements of other physical properties of the circulation such as arterial compliance, defined as ⌬V/⌬P, the change in blood vessel dimension (⌬V) with each heart beat at a given pulse pressure (⌬P), may allow for a more subtle and precise assessment of the vascular impact of the hypertensive process.2 Although initially limited to academic research facilities, the development of more simplified measurement techniques allows arterial compliance to now be assessed in a clinical outpatient setting.3 We recently demonstrated that computerized arterial pulse waveform analysis (CAPWA) provides compliance values corresponding to values obtained by other techniques, and to nonpressure-related markers of cardiovascular risk.4,5 In this preliminary study, we investigated the effects of antihypertensive drugs on arterial compliance. Because the relative clinical benefit after the administration of different drug classes remains controversial, we wondered whether drug-induced changes in arterial compliance necessarily follow lower achieved BP or pulse pressure values. If not, then arterial compliance measurements may help to distinguish the differential vascular benefit of different drug therapies, as well as provide an additional basis on which to individualize therapeutic recommendations. Received November 30, 2000. First decision February 28, 2001. Accepted August 7, 2002. From the Hypertension Center (LMR), New York Presbyterian Hospital–Cornell University Medical Center, New York, New York and University Vascular Center (LMR,MHL) Wayne State University, South- field, Michigan. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Lawrence M. Resnick, Hypertension Center, New York Presbyterian Hospital/Cornell U. Medical Center, 525 E. 68th Street/Starr 4, New York, NY 10021; e-mail: [email protected] 0895-7061/02/$22.00 PII S0895-7061(02)03058-3 Methods Essential hypertensive subjects evaluated at a suburban university-affiliated outpatient practice specializing in hypertension were either previously unmedicated, or were withdrawn from all antihypertensive therapy for 4 to 6 © 2002 by the American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd. Published by Elsevier Science Inc. AJH–December 2002–VOL. 15, NO. 12 BP DRUGS AND ARTERIAL COMPLIANCE 1097 Table 1. Clinical and laboratory data N Age (y) Sex (M/F) Weight (lb) SBP (mm Hg) DBP (mm Hg) PRA (ng/mL/min) C1 (mL/mm Hg) (⫻10) C2 (mL/mm Hg) (⫻100) CaBl CEI ARB BBl 11 57 ⫾ 3 4/7 163 ⫾ 8 161 ⫾ 4 94 ⫾ 3 0.6 ⫾ 0.2* 9.3 ⫾ 1 3.1 ⫾ 0.6 9 52 ⫾ 7 5/4 182 ⫾ 11 155 ⫾ 5 92 ⫾ 2 3.4 ⫾ 1.1 9.5 ⫾ 1.4 2.7 ⫾ 0.6 9 52 ⫾ 3 6/3 161 ⫾ 13 162 ⫾ 4 91 ⫾ 2 3.0 ⫾ 0.9 10.2 ⫾ 1.3 3.5 ⫾ 0.7 10 56 ⫾ 3 6/4 179 ⫾ 10 160 ⫾ 4 94 ⫾ 2 2.5 ⫾ 0.8 9.4 ⫾ 0.9 3.8 ⫾ 1.1 SBP ⫽ systolic blood pressure; CaBl ⫽ calcium channel antagonist; CEI ⫽ converting enzyme inhibitor; ARB ⫽ angiotensin receptor blockers; BBl ⫽ beta blockers; DBP ⫽ diastolic blood pressure; PRA ⫽ plasma renin activity; C1 ⫽ capacitive compliance; C2 ⫽ oscillatory compliance. * sig ⫽ 0.05 v other treatment groups. weeks before initiating drug therapy. Essential hypertension sufficient to warrant antihypertensive drug therapy was diagnosed on the basis of at least three independent BP readings exceeding 150/90 mm Hg. The choice of antihypertensive agent was based at least in part on renin– sodium profiling,6 and as part of standard procedures, these subjects were evaluated before, and 1 and 3 months after monotherapy was initiated with either dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonists (n ⫽ 11), converting enzyme inhibitors (n ⫽ 9), angiotensin II receptor blockers (n ⫽ 9), or -blockers (n ⫽ 10). The 39 consecutive subjects from 1998 to 1999 whose diastolic BP on single drug therapy decreased below and was sustained at ⬍90 mm Hg for the 3-month period are the subject of this report. At each visit, subjects arrived at the University Vascular Center between 9 AM and noon after an overnight fast. Blood pressure and arterial compliance were measured in the supine position by a CAPWA device (CV Profilor, Hypertension Diagnostics, Inc., Eagan, MN). A BP cuff was placed on the nondominant arm, and an applanation tonometer was placed over the radial pulse of the dominant arm. After measurement of the BP, a signal-averaged arterial pulse waveform was recorded for 30 sec. Based on a modified Windkessel model of the circulation, the diastolic decay of the averaged pulse waveform was analyzed, and two components of vascular compliance were then calculated, capacitive (C1) and oscillatory (or reflective) compliance (C2), corresponding to the components of compliance attributable to large and small arteries, respectively. Values for BP and arterial compliance at 1 and 3 months of drug therapy did not differ significantly from each other, and were averaged and compared with pretreatment values. Differences among the different drug classes for these variables were compared by a one-way analysis of variance, with post-hoc Bonferroni tests to determine statistical significance. Results Basal clinical and laboratory characteristics of the subjects studied are listed in Table 1. No significant differences in demographic characteristics, pretreatment BP, or arterial compliance values were noted among the different treatment groups. Based on the initial choice of these in agents in accordance with plasma renin activity (PRA) values, lower PRA values were observed among those subjects who became normotensive on calcium channel antagonist therapy, compared to subjects responding to converting enzyme inhibitor therapy, angiotensin II receptor blockade, or -blockade. The BP and arterial compliance responses to antihypertensive drug therapy are depicted in Fig. 1. On calcium channel antagonists (amlodipine, felodipine, or nifedipineGITS), systolic and diastolic BP decreased ⫺19 ⫾ 4/⫺15 ⫾ 2 mm Hg, and C1 and C2 compliance values increased 30.0% ⫾ 5.8% and 43.7% ⫾ 23.3%, respectively. On converting enzyme inhibitors (enalapril, fosinopril, or quinapril), BP decreased ⫺12 ⫾ 3/⫺13 ⫾ 2 mm Hg, and C1 and C2 increased 32.7% ⫾ 5.4% and 26.7% ⫾ 7.1%, respectively. On angiotensin II receptor antagonists (losartan, candesartan, or irbesartan), BP decreased ⫺10 ⫾ 3/⫺12 ⫾ 2 mm Hg, and C1 and C2 increased 36.3% ⫾ 11.8% and 43.6% ⫾ 23.1%, respectively. On -blockers (atenolol or metoprolol), BP decreased ⫺14 ⫾ 3/⫺12 ⫾ 2 mm Hg, but C1 (⫺3.9% ⫾ 7.6%) and C2 (⫺7.0% ⫾ 11.5%) compliance values did not change. Thus, the changes in systolic and diastolic BP did not differ significantly on the different drug therapies (Fig. 1A and B), and all post-treatment pressures differed significantly (P ⬍ .005) from pretreatment values. Calculated pulse pressure values also did not change significantly. However, compared to pretreatment values, and despite equivalent changes in pressure, a dissociation was observed between the drug-induced changes in pressure and in arterial compliance. Specifically, a significant increase in both C1 and C2 compliance components occurred in those subjects on calcium channel antagonists, converting 1098 BP DRUGS AND ARTERIAL COMPLIANCE AJH–December 2002–VOL. 15, NO. 12 FIG. 1. Effects of antihypertensive therapy on systolic (⌬SBP) and diastolic (⌬DBP) blood pressures (A and B), and on capacitive (%⌬C1) and reflective (%⌬C2) components of arterial compliance (C and D). CaBl ⫽ calcium channel blockers; CEI ⫽ converting enzyme inhibitors; ARB ⫽ angiotensin II receptor blockers; BBl ⫽ beta-blockers. *sig ⫽ 0.01 v other drug classes. enzyme inhibitors, and angiotensin II blockers (P ⬍ .05 v pretreatment), but not in those on -blockers (sig ⫽ 0.01 v other drug classes) (Fig. 1C and D). Discussion Current therapeutic recommendations in hypertension therapy are limited by the poor correspondence between the level of BP in a given individual and the occurrence of subsequent vascular disease. Consequently, many individuals are treated to benefit only a few, especially in subjects with only minimally elevated pressures. The use of echocardiography and urinary protein measurements to identify early cardiac and renal effects of hypertension has begun to distinguish among equally hypertensive individuals who may or may not already exhibit different degrees of organ disease and who can be targeted for more aggressive therapy. However, although blood vessels are the primary target organ of hypertension, BP has until recently remained the only easily available measurement of the vasculature. The recent development of arterial compliance (⌬V/⌬P) measurements routinely performed in an outpatient setting allows us to ask: Does assessment of arterial compliance provide additional information as to whether and which different antihypertensive drugs might benefit individual subjects independently of their effect on BP per se?7 We have begun to address this question by comparing CAPWA-based arterial compliance measurements before and 1 and 3 months after antihypertensive drug therapy with different individual drugs from among four different drug classes. By comparing the effects of these drugs in subjects whose BP were both equivalent at the start of therapy, and who all achieved equivalent diastolic BP values ⬍90 mm Hg on monotherapy with individual agents, we sought to make the data obtained more easily interpretable in clinical practice. We also used renin– sodium profiling as a pathophysiologic and practical guide to the choice of initial drug therapy, rather than a random assignment of drugs, which may help to explain the large BP responses obtained with the drugs in this study, exceeding average published responses among the general hypertensive population. This is quite consistent with the known enhanced responsiveness of low renin subjects to calcium channel blockade, and of normal– high renin subjects to agents interfering with the secretion (-blockers), activation (converting enzyme inhibitors), or action (angiotensin receptor blockers) of the renin-angiotensin system (Table 1, Fig. 1A and B).8 The chief finding of this preliminary study is that for the same decrease in BP, and without significant changes in pulse pressure, short-term antihypertensive monotherapy with agents that block L-type calcium channels, angiotensin converting enzyme, or the angiotensin II type 1 receptor, all significantly increase both C1 and C2 components of arterial compliance. However, this was not true for -blockade. This differential sensitivity of the vasculature to equally antihypertensive therapies suggests 1) that assessment of arterial compliance provides information above and beyond that of BP or even pulse pressure, and 2) that choosing agents that improve both BP and arterial compliance might further enhance the potential clinical benefit of drug therapy in hypertension. Our present results further support other studies also suggesting the relevance of arterial compliance measurements in the clinical assessment of hypertension. We have AJH–December 2002–VOL. 15, NO. 12 previously applied different techniques to measure arterial compliance in normal and hypertensive subjects, and to investigate the biologic determinants of this vascular property. We found, in agreement with previous studies, that essential hypertension is associated with decreased arterial compliance, that these values are closely linked to ambient BP, predict the degree of cardiac hypertrophy, and reflect numerous other cardiovascular risk factors, including age, urinary sodium excretion, fasting blood glucose, abdominal visceral fat, and intracellular free magnesium levels, all contributing to vascular function independently of BP.2–5,7, 9 –14 Furthermore, we found that the technique of computerized pulse waveform analysis used in this study provides values for arterial compliance closely corresponding to overall systemic compliance calculated as the ratio of stroke volume to pulse pressure, and with direct magnetic resonance imaging-based assessment of aortic distensibility.5 Our results are also consistent with previous reports in the literature in which the effects of antihypertensive drugs on arterial compliance have been evaluated. Specifically, in separate reports, both calcium blockers as well as converting enzyme inhibitors were shown to significantly improve arterial compliance, whereas metoprolol or atenolol did not. This was true despite equal lowering of BP.11,12 Furthermore, the present report confirms recent data demonstrating that angiotensin II receptor antagonists also improve arterial compliance.15,16 That these effects on compliance may be independent of BP further suggests that the regulation of cardiovascular homeostasis by the renin-angiotensin system is not limited to the control of BP alone.15 Certain caveats also need to be considered. First, because we did not measure isobaric compliance in this study, we may not have adequately demonstrated druginduced changes in intrinsic arterial wall properties. Nevertheless, because vascular disease clinically occurs at and progresses under the influence of ambient BP levels similar to those measured in the present study, we consider the results obtained to be at least of functional, as well as clinical, significance. Second, a variety of individual drugs were used in each drug class, representing the average office practice of this university-based clinic, and the small number of subjects reported emphasizes the preliminary nature of this study. It is possible, of course, that not all individual -blockers fail to significantly improve arterial compliance, or that not all calcium channel blockers, angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors, or angiotensin II receptor blockers improve it. This clearly warrants future studies. At the same time, however, these easily distinguishable as well as statistically significant differences were observed with a relatively small number of subjects, not requiring the massive numbers of subjects usually necessary to demonstrate statistically significant differences between drugs effects on other “target organ” events in clinical trials defined by BP, such as left ventricular mass BP DRUGS AND ARTERIAL COMPLIANCE 1099 or urinary protein responses. This also suggests arterial compliance as a more proximate, subtle, and direct reflection of antihypertensive drug effects on the underlying hypertensive disease process compared to previously used clinical variables, and support the increased use of these measurements as a valuable marker of the vascular impact of hypertension. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. Sheps S: The Sixth Report of the Joint National Committee on prevention, detection, evaluation, and treatment of high blood pressure. Bethesda, MD, National Institutes of Health, NHLBI, Nat’l High Blood Pressure Education Program November 1997. Report No.: NIH Publication 98-4080. Safar ME, Plante GE, London GM: Vascular compliance and blood volume in essential hypertension, in Laragh JH, Brenner BM (eds): Hypertension: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management, 2nd ed. New York, Raven Press, 1995, pp 377–387. Cohn JN, Finkelstein S, McVeigh G, Morgan D, LeMay L, Robinson J: Noninvasive pulse wave analysis for the early detection of vascular disease. Hypertension 1995;26:503–508. Resnick LM, Militianu D, Cunnings AJ, Pipe JG, Evelhoch JL, Soulen RL: Direct magnetic resonance determination of aortic distensibility in essential hypertension: Relation to age, abdominal visceral fat, and in situ intracellular free magnesium. Hypertension 1997;30:654 –659. Resnick LM, Militianu D, Cunnings AJ, Pipe JG, Evelhoch JL, Soulen RL, Lester MA: Pulse waveform analysis of arterial compliance: Relation to other techniques, age, and metabolic variables. Am J Hypertens 2000;13:1243–1249. Laragh JH, Resnick LM: Recognizing and treating two types of long-term vasoconstriction in hypertension. Kidney Int 1988; 34(Suppl 25):S162–S174. Levenson J, Simon A: Heterogeneity of response of peripheral arteries to antihypertensive drugs in essential hypertension. Basic effects and functional consequences. Drugs 1988;35(Suppl 5):34 – 39. Laragh JH, Sealey JE: Renin system understanding for analysis and treatment of hypertensive patients: A means to quantify the vasoconstrictor elements, diagnose curable renal and adrenal causes, assess risk of cardiovascular morbidity, and find the best-fit drug regimen, in Laragh JH, Brenner BM (eds): Hypertension: Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, and Management, 2nd ed. New York, Raven Press, 1995, pp 1813–1836. Honda T, Yano K, Matsuoka H, Hamada M, Hiwada K: Evaluation of aortic distensibility in patients with essential hypertension by using cine magnetic resonance imaging. Angiology 1994;45:207– 212. Cameron JD, Jennings GL, Dart AM: The relationship between arterial compliance, age, blood pressure and serum lipid levels. J Hypertens 1995;13:1718 –1723. DeCesaris R, Ranieri G, Filitti V, Andriani A, Bonfantino MV: Forearm arterial distensibility in patients with hypertension: Comparative effects of long-term ACE-inhibition and -blocking. Clin Pharm Ther 1993;53:360 –367. DeCesaris R, Ranieri G, Filitti V, Andriani A: Large artery compliance in essential hypertension. Effects of calcium antagonism and -blocking. Am J Hypertens 1992;5:624 –628. Blacher J, Asmar R, Djane S, London GM, Safar ME: Aortic pulse wave velocity as a marker of cardiovascular risk in hypertensive patients. Hypertension 1999;33:1111–1117. 1100 BP DRUGS AND ARTERIAL COMPLIANCE 14. deSimone G, Roman MJ, Koren MJ, Mensah GA, Ganau A, Devereux RB: Stroke volume/pulse pressure ratio and cardiovascular risk in arterial hypertension. Hypertension 1999;33:800 –805. 15. Klemsdal TO, Moan A, Kjeldsen SE: Effects of selective angiotensin II receptor blockade with losartan on arterial compliance in AJH–December 2002–VOL. 15, NO. 12 patients with mild essential hypertension. Blood Pressure 1999;8: 214 –219. 16. Miller JA, Thai K, Scholey JW: Angiotensin II receptor gene polymorphism predicts response to losartan and angiotensin II. Kidney Int 2000;57:2173–2174.