Aims A potassium replete diet is associated with lower blood pressure (BP) and lower risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Whether these associations differ between men and women and whether they... Show moreAims A potassium replete diet is associated with lower blood pressure (BP) and lower risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Whether these associations differ between men and women and whether they depend on daily sodium intake is unknown. Methods and results An analysis was performed in 11 267 men and 13 696 women from the EPIC-Norfolk cohort. Twenty-four hour excretion of sodium and potassium, reflecting intake, was estimated from sodium and potassium concentration in spot urine samples using the Kawasaki formula. Linear and Cox regression were used to explore the association between potassium intake, systolic BP (SBP), and CVD events (defined as hospitalization or death due to CVD). After adjustment for confounders, interaction by sex was found for the association between potassium intake and SBP (P < 0.001). In women, but not in men, the inverse slope between potassium intake and SBP was steeper in those within the highest tertile of sodium intake compared with those within the lowest tertile of sodium intake (P < 0.001 for interaction by sodium intake). Both in men and women, higher potassium intake was associated with a lower risk of CVD events, but the hazard ratio (HR) associated with higher potassium intake was lower in women than in men [highest vs. lowest potassium intake tertile: men: HR 0.93, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.87-1.00; women: HR 0.89, 95% CI 0.83-0.95, P = 0.033 for interaction by sex]. Conclusion The association between potassium intake, SBP, and CVD events is sex specific. The data suggest that women with a high sodium intake in particular benefit most from a higher potassium intake with regard to SBP. Show less
With increasing age, incidence and prevalence of cardiovascular disease increase. Many physicians face the dilemma whether or not to start preventive treatment in old age. To help physicians decide... Show moreWith increasing age, incidence and prevalence of cardiovascular disease increase. Many physicians face the dilemma whether or not to start preventive treatment in old age. To help physicians decide whether to advise preventive medication to their older patients, prediction of those at highest or lowest (relative) risk using (preferably) inexpensive and easy to use cardiovascular risk factors is important. However, in old age there is a lack of good cardiovascular risk predictors. This thesis shows that the use of multiple blood pressure measurements expressed in the variability (in diastolic blood pressure) or trends in blood pressure can identify older persons with high cardiovascular risk. It also shows that in the oldest old, the absence or presence of heart failure does not influence the prognostic value of low systolic blood pressure regarding risk of death. The serological biomarker N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) is found to be an interesting candidate in cardiovascular risk prediction in old age, especially in secondary prevention. In the oldest old, an increase in NT-proBNP still reflects increased risk of (cardiovascular) death, independent of decreasing renal function and is associated with incident heart failure and atrial fibrillation. Show less