33-Year-Old Male with Persistent Systolic Hypertension*
February 14, 2024
64-Year-Old Male with Hypertension and Comorbidity
February 14, 2024

Personalized Treatment Regimen Following Pulse Wave Analysis

41-Year-Old Male with Untreated Hypertension

Patient Medical History

  • 41-year-old sedentary male
  • No comorbidities
  • No current Rx regimen

Initial Digital Vascular Biomarker Assessment

Brachial Blood Pressure 144/64 mmHg
Central Systolic Blood Pressure 109 mmHg
Central Pulse Pressure Amplification 77%

Initial Assessment Interpretation

This male patient’s substantial pulse pressure amplification (brachial 78 mmHg/central 44 mmHg; 77%) and the central systolic BP < 124 mmHg argues against drug therapy. 

Figure 6. Central Pressure Waveform

BBP indicates brachial blood pressure systolic/diastolic; CBP, central blood pressure systolic/diastolic; CPP, central pulse pressure; AIx, augmentation index; HR, heart rate; bpm, beats per minute.

Intervention

An exercise regimen was recommended and followed.

Follow Up Digital Vascular Biomarker Assessment

Brachial Blood Pressure 124/62 mmHg
Central Systolic Blood Pressure 99 mmHg
Central Pulse Pressure Amplification 68%

Follow up Assessment Interpretation

Following a three month exercise regimen, this male patient shows brachial systolic pressure improvement and continued substantial pulse pressure amplification (brachial 62mmHg/central 37mmHg; 68%). No additional pharmacologic therapies were prescribed and he was encouraged to continue the exercise program.

This clinical case study  supports two important clinical decisions. One was not to pharmacologically treat a modest brachial systolic pressure elevation. The other was to support the value of exercise, which improved the patient’s brachial blood pressure without loss of the advantageous central pressure profile.

*Townsend RR et al. Journal of Clinical Hypertension. 2015; 17:7, 503–513.
http://bit.ly/2gc5mdD

Figure 7. Central Pressure Waveform

Other Case Studies

72-Year-Old Male with Very Stiff Arteries and at High Risk
63-Year-Old Male with Hypertension and Low Augmentation Index
61-Year-Old Male with Hypertension and Comorbidities
33-Year-Old Male with Persistent Systolic Hypertension*
41-Year-Old Male with Untreated Hypertension
64-Year-Old Male with Hypertension and Comorbidity
45-Year-Old Male with Uncontrolled Hypertension
58-Year-Old African American Female with Diabetes and Uncontrolled Hypertension
70-Year-Old Female with Chronic Kidney Disease and Hypertension