Original Contributions |
From the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (H.C.M., C.A.M.); Louisiana State University Medical Center, New Orleans (R.E.T., M.C.O., J.P.S.); the Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, San Antonio, Tex (H.C.M.); The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio (J.F.C.); and Ohio State University, Columbus (E.E.H.).
Correspondence to Henry C. McGill, Jr, MD, Southwest Foundation for Biomedical Research, PO Box 760549, San Antonio, TX 78245-0549. E-mail jstron{at}lsumc.edu
AbstractIn a cooperative
multicenter study, the Pathobiological Determinants of
Atherosclerosis in Youth, we measured
atherosclerosis of the aorta and right coronary
artery (RCA) in 2403 black and white men and women 15 through 34 years
of age who died of external causes and were autopsied in forensic
laboratories. We measured the diameter of the opened, flattened, and
fixed RCA and the diameter, intimal thickness, intimal cross-sectional
area, medial thickness, and medial cross-sectional area of the
pressure-perfused, fixed left anterior descending (LAD)
coronary artery. Using the ratio of intimal thickness to outer
diameter of the small renal arteries to predict mean
arterial pressure during life, we classified the cases as
normotensive (mean arterial pressure <110 mm Hg) or
hypertensive (mean arterial pressure
110 mm Hg).
The prevalence of hypertension by age, sex, and race corresponded
closely with that measured in a survey of the living population.
Hypertension had little or no effect on fatty streaks. Hypertension was
associated with more extensive raised lesions in the abdominal aortas
and RCAs of blacks >20 years of age and in the RCAs of whites >25
years of age. At all ages, women had less extensive raised lesions in
the RCAs than did men, but the effect of hypertension on raised lesions
was similar to that in men. Adjustment for serum lipoprotein
cholesterol levels and smoking in a subset of cases yielded
results similar to those obtained without adjustment. Hypertension was
associated with larger diameters of the RCA and LAD coronary artery and
with larger cross-sectional intimal and medial areas of the LAD
coronary artery. Hypertension augments atherosclerosis
in both men and women primarily by accelerating the conversion of fatty
streaks to raised lesions beginning in the third decade of life, and
the effect of hypertension increases with age.
Key Words: coronary arteries aorta atherosclerosis arterial structure hypertension
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