Vascular dysfunction after coarctation repair is related to the age at surgery

2005 
Abstract Background: Despite repair of aortic coarctation, hypertension is frequent in adults and premature coronary and cerebrovascular disease remain of concern. Persistent impairment of arterial dilation has been suspected to contribute to abnormal blood pressure regulation. We tested the hypothesis that arterial reactivity is more likely to be impaired in patients corrected at older age. Methods: We studied changes in brachial artery diameter in response to reactive hyperemia (FMD) and to nitroglycerin (NMD) in 36 patients and 25 controls. Depending on their age at surgery, patients were divided in group A (surgery Results: Cholesterol levels and percentage of smokers were similar in patients and controls, but 16 patients had arterial hypertension compared to none of the controls. Endothelium-dependent vasodilation, FMD, and endothelium-independent vasodilation, NMD, were significantly impaired in patients vs. controls (8.2±6.2% vs. 13.0±5.1%, p p p p p p p p Conclusions: Persistent impairment of FMD and NMD after repair of coarctation is more likely to be present in patients corrected at older age. It may be an important contributor to abnormal blood pressure regulation and late morbidity and mortality.
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