Arterial compliance and its dynamics in obese adolescents

J Physiol Pharmacol. 2022 Oct;73(5). doi: 10.26402/jpp.2022.5.06. Epub 2023 Mar 16.

Abstract

Arterial compliance (AC) decrease with aging is accelerated by factors associated with the progression of atherosclerotic process, including obesity. Prevalence of obesity increases not only in adult population but also in children and adolescents. The results of studies characterizing the effect of obesity on AC (often indirectly estimated by pulse wave velocity (PWV)) are contradictory. Considering the limitations of previously applied methods and the need to interpret AC values in the context of potential confounders or during various physiological states, the aim of this study was to compare AC of control and obese adolescents during four different physiological states: supine rest, head-up tilt (HUT), supine recovery and mental arithmetic (MA). AC was assessed by the method based on two-element Windkessel model as the ratio of a time constant t characterizing diastolic blood pressure decay and total peripheral resistance (TPR). In total, fifty healthy and normotensive subjects (40 females, 10 males, age 17.5 years (SD=1.1 years)) were examined - 25 obese and 25 age- and sex-matched control subjects. We observed significantly increased AC values during all phases in obese group. An increase in AC was also preserved after controlling for blood pressure influence. These results were confirmed using PWV based AC estimation. Interestingly, AC decreased similarly during stress phases (HUT, MA) in both groups. Lastly, TPR was decreased throughout the study protocol in obese subjects. In conclusion, AC is increased in young obese subjects consistently during various physiological states. Furthermore, changes of physiological states evoke similar response of AC in both groups indicating preserved autonomic control of elastic arteries. A decreased TPR in obese subjects points towards the influence of different maturation state of the arterial tree and/or changes in vasomotion possibly counterbalancing acceleration of atherosclerosis process.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Arteries
  • Blood Pressure / physiology
  • Child
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Pediatric Obesity*
  • Pulse Wave Analysis*
  • Vascular Resistance