Blood pressure change and survival after age 75.

Higher diastolic pressure predicted better survival in men 75 years or older in two prior analyses in the Rancho Bernardo population. Diastolic change was implicated as a possible explanation. We studied this by assessing survival according to blood pressure change in 795 men and women aged 75 years and older at the time of a second measurement taken an average of 11 years after the first, who were then followed for 5 years. Sex-specific analyses compared participants with a diastolic decrease of 5 mm Hg or greater and participants with a systolic decrease of 10 mm Hg or greater with those whose blood pressure levels did not change or increased. In men, after adjustment for baseline pressure, a decrease in diastolic pressure of 5 mm Hg or greater was associated with higher all-cause mortality (relative risk, 2.33; 95% confidence interval, 1.39 to 3.91) and cardiovascular mortality (3.13, 1.47 to 6.66). The mortality risk was strongest in men who took antihypertensive medication and had a fall in diastolic pressure (12.33, 2.73 to 55.72) compared with treated men whose pressures did not decrease. Among men with isolated systolic hypertension, those treated whose diastolic pressure remained stable had the best survival. A systolic fall in men and a decrease in either diastolic or systolic in women was not associated with poorer survival after adjustment for baseline pressure. We conclude that a fall in diastolic pressure of 5 mm Hg was associated with poor survival in men after age 75. This risk was strongest in men who took antihypertensive medication.

[1]  L. Kuller,et al.  Lipoprotein Lipids in Older People: Results From the Cardiovascular Health Study , 1992, Circulation.

[2]  K. Manton,et al.  Blood pressure and mortality risk in the elderly. , 1991, American journal of epidemiology.

[3]  R. D'Agostino,et al.  Relation of low diastolic blood pressure to coronary heart disease death in presence of myocardial infarction: the Framingham Study. , 1991, BMJ.

[4]  Factors associated with paradoxical survival at higher blood pressures in the very old. , 1991, American journal of epidemiology.

[5]  C. Bulpitt Is systolic pressure more important than diastolic pressure? , 1990, Journal of human hypertension.

[6]  P. Larochelle Hypertension in the elderly , 1990, Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy.

[7]  P. Stevenson,et al.  Preliminary report of the Stroke Prevention in Atrial Fibrillation Study. , 1990, The New England journal of medicine.

[8]  E. Lakatta Changes in cardiovascular function with aging. , 1990, European heart journal.

[9]  T G Ganiats,et al.  Paradoxical survival of elderly men with high blood pressure. , 1989, BMJ.

[10]  Matti Haavisto,et al.  Blood pressure and five year survival in the very old , 1988, British medical journal.

[11]  J. Staessen,et al.  Antihypertensive Drug Treatment in Elderly Hypertensive Subjects: Evidence of Protection , 1988, Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology.

[12]  C. Bulpitt,et al.  EFFICACY OF ANTIHYPERTENSIVE DRUG TREATMENT ACCORDING TO AGE, SEX, BLOOD PRESSURE, AND PREVIOUS CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE IN PATIENTS OVER THE AGE OF 60 , 1986, The Lancet.

[13]  L. Kuller,et al.  Systolic Hypertension in the Elderly Program (SHEP) , 1986, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[14]  Langford Hg The hypertension detection and follow-up program. , 1984 .

[15]  H. Langford The hypertension detection and follow-up program. , 1984, New York state journal of medicine.

[16]  Margo J. Anderson,et al.  The Census , 1921, The Hospital.