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  • 1. Madueme, Peace Predictors of Exaggerated Exerise-Induced Systolic Blood Pressures in Young Patients After Coarctation Repair

    MS, University of Cincinnati, 2012, Medicine: Clinical and Translational Research

    Background: In normotensive subjects, an exaggerated blood pressure response to exercise is associated with the development of resting hypertension. We sought to 1) determine the prevalence of elevated blood pressures during exercise in post-operative coarctation patients with normal resting blood pressure and 2) investigate associations with exercise induced hypertension in this population. Method: 38 subjects status post end to end anastomosis repair and resting normotension were prospectively enrolled. All patients underwent anthropometric and blood pressure measurements, echocardiographic evaluation of function, arterial stiffness assessment by pulse wave velocity and a graded exercise test. An abnormal response was defined as a maximum systolic blood pressure greater than the 95th percentile of published normal values. Correlation analyses and stepwise regression analyses were performed. Results: Mean age was 12.7 years, 79% male. Mean resting systolic blood pressure was 111.3 mmHg, mean exercise systolic blood pressure was 178.1 mmHg. The prevalence of a systolic blood pressure greater than the 95th percentile was 16.7%. In multivariate analysis, exercise systolic blood pressure index was associated with body mass index, age, aortic valve annulus, shortening fraction and pulse wave velocity (R2 = 0.79, p = 0.0009). Estimates of ventricular filling and indexed left ventricular mass were elevated. Conclusions: There is a risk of elevated systolic blood pressure during exercise in normotensive patients after coarctation repair. Resting blood pressures are useful but not sufficient. Echocardiography demonstrated abnormalities suggestive of a chronic cardiac burden despite resting normotension. Regular imaging may be necessary to improve long term outcomes. New paradigms for the continued follow-up of these patients are necessary.

    Committee: Erin Nicole Haynes PhD (Committee Chair); Phillip Khoury MS (Committee Member); Thomas Kimball MD (Committee Member) Subjects: Surgery