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Featured researches published by Arnljot Flaa.


Hypertension | 2008

Sympathoadrenal Stress Reactivity Is a Predictor of Future Blood Pressure: An 18-Year Follow-Up Study

Arnljot Flaa; Ivar K. Eide; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Morten Rostrup

In the present study we hypothesized that arterial catecholamine concentrations during rest and 2 laboratory stress tests were independent predictors of blood pressure at an 18-year follow-up. At entry, blood pressure, heart rate, and arterial plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations were measured in 99 healthy men (age: 19.3±0.4 years, mean±SD) at rest, during a mental arithmetic test, and during a cold pressor test. After 18.0±0.9 years of follow-up, resting blood pressure was measured. The norepinephrine and epinephrine concentrations during the mental arithmetic explained 12.7% of the variation of future systolic blood pressure after adjusting for initial resting blood pressure, family history, body mass index, and systolic blood pressure during the stress test in a multiple regression analysis (adjusted R2=0.651; P<0.001). To conclude, the present study shows that sympathetic nervous activity during mental arithmetic predicts future blood pressure, indicating a possible causal factor in the development of essential hypertension independent of the initial blood pressure.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2008

Increased sympathetic reactivity may predict insulin resistance: an 18-year follow-up study

Arnljot Flaa; Tonje A. Aksnes; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Ivar Eide; Morten Rostrup

Insulin resistance and sympathetic activity are related by a positive feedback system. However, which precedes the other still remains unclear. The present study aimed to investigate the predictive role of sympathoadrenal activity in the development of insulin resistance in an 18-year follow-up study. We also examined whether reactivity to 2 different stress tests, a cold pressor test and a mental stress test, would differ in their predictive power. The 2 tests are supposed to represent different reactivity mechanisms: alpha- and beta-adrenergic responses, respectively. At entry, arterial plasma epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations were measured in 99 healthy men (age, 19.3 +/- 0.4 years, mean +/- SD) during rest, a mental stress test, and a cold pressor test. Fasting plasma glucose concentration was measured at entry and at follow-up. Insulin resistance at follow-up was calculated using the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR). Eighty subjects (81%) were eligible for follow-up after 18.0 +/- 0.9 years (mean +/- SD). The norepinephrine responses to cold pressor test at entry predicted plasma glucose concentration (r = 0.301, P = .010) and HOMA-IR (r = 0.383, P = .004) at follow-up in univariate analyses. In multiple regression analyses, corrected for fasting glucose at entry, family history of diabetes, blood pressure-lowering medication, body mass index at entry, and level of exercise, norepinephrine response to cold pressor test was found to be a positive predictor of future HOMA-IR (P = .010). This is the first long-term follow-up study in white subjects showing that sympathetic reactivity predicts future insulin resistance 18 years later. These findings may provide further insights into the pathophysiologic mechanisms of insulin resistance.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2013

Effects of anthocyanins on cardiovascular risk factors and inflammation in pre-hypertensive men: a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled crossover study.

S S Hassellund; Arnljot Flaa; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Ingebjørg Seljeflot; Anette Karlsen; I. Erlund; Morten Rostrup

High intake of fruits and vegetables is associated with reduced cardiovascular risk. A number of fruits and vegetables are rich in anthocyanins, which constitute a subgroup of the flavonoids. Anthocyanins have demonstrated anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidative properties, and anthocyanin-rich interventions have indicated beneficial effects on blood pressure and other cardiovascular risk factors. We assessed whether a purified anthocyanin supplement improves cardiovascular metabolic risk factors and markers of inflammation and oxidative stress in prehypertensive participants, and whether plasma polyphenols are increased 1–3 h following intake. In all, 31 men between 35–51 years with screening blood pressure >140/90 mm Hg without anti-hypertensive or lipid-lowering medication, were randomized in a double-blinded crossover study to placebo versus 640 mg anthocyanins daily. Treatment durations were 4 weeks with a 4-week washout. High-density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol and blood glucose were significantly higher after anthocyanin versus placebo treatment (P=0.043 and P=0.024, respectively). No effects were observed on inflammation or oxidative stress in vivo, except for von Willebrand factor, which was higher in the anthocyanin period (P=0.007). Several plasma polyphenols increased significantly 1–3 h following anthocyanin intake. The present study strengthens the evidence that anthocyanins may increase HDL-cholesterol levels, and this is demonstrated for the first time in prehypertensive and non-dyslipidemic men. However, no other beneficial effects in the short term were found on pathophysiological markers of cardiovascular disease.


Hypertension | 2006

Sympathetic Activity and Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Young Men in the Low, Normal, and High Blood Pressure Ranges

Arnljot Flaa; Håvard H. Mundal; Ivar Eide; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Morten Rostrup

We hypothesized that resting blood pressure is related to sympathetic activity in young men who are unaware of their blood pressure status in high, normal, and low ranges and that there is a relationship between sympathetic activity and coronary risk factors. Forty-three healthy, young men from the 1st [group 1, 106/52±2/2 mm Hg (±SEM), n=15], 50th (group 2, 129/79±2/1 mm Hg, n=15), and 98th to 99th percentile (group 3, 166/97±3/1 mm Hg, n=13) at a blood pressure screening were studied with intraarterial blood pressure, heart rate, and arterial plasma catecholamine responses to a mental, cold pressor, and orthostatic stress test. At baseline, group 3 had significant higher blood pressure (137/74±3/2 mm Hg) than group 2 (126/66±3/2 mm Hg; P<0.01) and group 1 (116/62±2/1 mm Hg; P<0.001). Group 1 had lower systolic blood pressure than group 2 (P=0.007). Baseline epinephrine and norepinephrine showed a clear positive linear trend (P<0.05), with the lowest values being in group 1 and highest in group 3. High-density lipoprotein was negatively related to epinephrine (r=−0.387; P=0.010). Mental stress was the only test that showed significant differences in cardiovascular and sympathetic responses among the groups, where group 3 had a more pronounced response in systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart rate compared with group 1 (P<0.001) and group 2 (P<0.01). Furthermore, we found significant positive linear trends for &Dgr;catecholamines during mental stress across the groups (&Dgr;epinephrine P=0.001 and &Dgr;norepinephrine P=0.026, ANOVA). We conclude that resting blood pressure reflects both variation in resting arterial catecholamines and variation in cardiovascular and sympathetic responses specifically to mental stress.


Hypertension | 2010

Long-Term Stability of Cardiovascular and Catecholamine Responses to Stress Tests An 18-Year Follow-Up Study

Skjalg S. Hassellund; Arnljot Flaa; Leiv Sandvik; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Morten Rostrup

Cardiovascular (CV) hyperreactivity to stress must be reasonably stable if it is considered to be important in the development of hypertension and CV disease. The aim of the present study was to assess long-term stability of blood pressure, heart rate, epinephrine, and norepinephrine responses to a cold pressor test and a mental arithmetic stress test. Eighty-one subjects selected from the first (n=30), 50th (n=30), and 95th to 99th (n=39) percentiles of the mean blood pressure distribution at a military draft procedure were tested on 2 occasions 18 years apart. Stress responses were measured during a cold pressor test (hand immersed in ice water for 1 minute) and during a mental stress test (subtraction for 5 minutes). Intra-arterial blood pressure measurements and arterial catecholamine samples were taken at the initial examination. At follow-up, noninvasive Finapres beat-to-beat blood pressure measurements and venous plasma catecholamine samples were used. The 18-year correlations of the CV and epinephrine absolute responses during mental stress ranged from 0.6 to 0.8. The entry/follow-up correlation of systolic blood pressure during the mental stress test (95% CI: 0.69 to 0.86) was significantly higher than during the cold pressor test (95% CI: 0.30 to 0.65), and responses to mental stress overall appeared to be more stable than responses to the cold pressor test. Our study suggests that CV and sympathoadrenal reactivity, specifically to mental stress, are relatively stable individual characteristics. These results support one of the necessary preconditions to consider hyperreactivity involved in the development of hypertension and CV disease.


Journal of Hypertension | 2007

Prevention of new-onset atrial fibrillation and its predictors with angiotensin II-receptor blockers in the treatment of hypertension and heart failure.

Tonje A. Aksnes; Arnljot Flaa; Arne Strand; Sverre E. Kjeldsen

Atrial fibrillation is the most frequent occurring sustained cardiac arrhythmia and it is related to common cardiac disease conditions. Hypertension increases the risk of atrial fibrillation by approximately two-fold and, because of the high prevalence of hypertension, it accounts for more cases of atrial fibrillation than any other risk factor. In recent years, there are two large hypertension trials (LIFE and VALUE) and two large heart failure trials (CHARM and Val-HeFT) reporting the beneficial effect of angiotensin II-receptor blockers (ARBs) on new-onset atrial fibrillation, beyond the blood pressure-lowering effect. Blockade of the renin–angiotensin system may prevent left atrial dilatation, atrial fibrosis, dysfunction and conduction velocity slowing. Some studies also indicate direct anti-arrhythmic properties. This review aims to consider the preventive effect of ARBs on new-onset atrial fibrillation observed in recent reports from these trials, and to discuss possible mechanisms of the beneficial effect of angiotensin II-receptor blockade.


Journal of Human Hypertension | 2012

Effects of anthocyanins on blood pressure and stress reactivity: a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled crossover study

S S Hassellund; Arnljot Flaa; Leiv Sandvik; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Morten Rostrup

High intakes of flavonoids are associated with reduced cardiovascular risk, and flavonoids such as cocoa and soy protein isolate have shown beneficial effects on blood pressure (BP). Anthocyanins constitute a flavonoid subgroup consumed in regular diets, but few studies have assessed the antihypertensive potential of anthocyanins. We aimed to assess whether high concentrations of relatively pure anthocyanins reduce BP and alter cardiovascular and catecholamine reactivity to stress. A total of 31 healthy men between 35–51 years of age with screening BP >140/90 mm Hg, not on antihypertensive or lipid-lowering medication, were randomised in a double-blind crossover study to placebo versus 320-mg anthoycanins twice daily. Treatment duration was 4 weeks, with a 4-week washout. Sitting and supine BP measurements, ambulatory BP recording and stress reactivity were assessed and analyzed by a paired sample t-test. In all, 27 patients completed all visits. Sitting systolic BP (primary endpoint) was 133 mm Hg after placebo versus 135 mm Hg after anthocyanin treatment (P=0.25). Anthocyanins did neither affect semiautomatic oscillometric BP measurements in the sitting or supine position nor 24-h ambulatory BP. No significant differences in stress reactivity were found across treatment periods. Overall, we conclude that high concentrations of these relatively pure anthocyanins do not reduce BP in healthy men with a high normal BP.


Scandinavian Cardiovascular Journal | 2001

Gender specific sympathetic and hemorrheological responses to mental stress in healthy young subjects

Anne Elisabeth Ross; Arnljot Flaa; Aud Høieggen; Henrik M. Reims; Ivar K. Eide; Sverre E. Kjeldsen

Objective - Activation of the sympathetic nervous system may increase hematocrit (Hct), whole blood viscosity (WBV), and possibly cardiovascular risk. The aim was to study gender specific differences of mental stress on sympathetic reactivity and blood rheology. Methods - Responses in blood pressure, heart rate (HR), Hct, WBV (Bohlin rotational viscosimeter), and plasma catecholamines to a mental arithmetic stress test (MST) were measured in male ( n = 10, 23 - 3 years, BMI 23 - 2 kg/m2) and female ( n = 10, 21 - 4 years, BMI 24 - 2 kg/m2) students. Results - Systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and HR increased during MST in men and women, and declined to baseline levels after 15 min of recovery. In men, plasma adrenaline increased by 217% during MST ( p < 0.01, ANOVA), and plasma noradrenaline increased by 68% ( p < 0.05). Hct and WBV at low shear rates (0.5 and 1.1 l/s) increased as well ( p < 0.01, p < 0.05, and p < 0.05, respectively). In women, the increase in plasma adrenaline averaged 118% during MST ( p < 0.05) while plasma noradrenaline (-3%, p = 0.38), Hct, and WBV at all shear rates remained unchanged. Men and women differed in j adrenaline ( p < 0.05), j noradrenaline ( p = 0.01), j Hct ( p < 0.05), and j WBV ( p < 0.05). j Hct tended to correlate with j SBP ( r = 0.60, p = 0.07), j DBP ( r = 0.57, p = 0.09), and j HR ( r = 0.50, p = 0.14), and correlated significantly with j noradrenaline ( r = 0.66, p < 0.05) in men only. Multiple regression analysis showed that gender independently explained 22% of the change in Hct during mental stress. Conclusion - Data suggest gender specific differences in sympathetic and hemorrheological responses to mental stress in healthy young subjects. In men, sympathetic responses were related to hemorrheological responses, but not in women. It may be speculated whether such differences in stress responses may contribute to lower cardiovascular risk in premenopausal women than in men.OBJECTIVE Activation of the sympathetic nervous system may increase hematocrit (Hct), whole blood viscosity (WBV), and possibly cardiovascular risk. The aim was to study gender specific differences of mental stress on sympathetic reactivity and blood rheology. METHODS Responses in blood pressure, heart rate (HR), Hct, WBV (Bohlin rotational viscosimeter), and plasma catecholamines to a mental arithmetic stress test (MST) were measured in male (n = 10, 23 +/- 3 years, BMI 23 +/- 2 kg/m2) and female (n = 10, 21 +/- 4 years, BMI 24 +/- 2 kg/m2) students. RESULTS Systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP), and HR increased during MST in men and women, and declined to baseline levels after 15 min of recovery. In men, plasma adrenaline increased by 217% during MST (p < 0.01, ANOVA). and plasma noradrenaline increased by 68% (p < 0.05). Hct and WBV at low shear rates (0.5 and 1.1 l/s) increased as well (p < 0.001, p < 0.05, and p < 0.05, respectively). In women, the increase in plasma adrenaline averaged 118% during MST (p < 0.05) while plasma noradrenaline (-3%, p = 0.38), Hct, and WBV at all shear rates remained unchanged. Men and women differed in A adrenaline (p < 0.05), A noradrenaline (p = 0.01), delta Hct (p < 0.05), and delta WBV (p < 0.05). A Hct tended to correlate with delta SBP (r= 0.60, p = 0.07), A DBP (r = 0.57. p = 0.09). and delta HR (r = 0.50, p = 0.14), and correlated significantly with A noradrenaline (r = 0.66, p < 0.05) in men only. Multiple regression analysis showed that gender independently explained 22% of the change in Hct during mental stress. CONCLUSION Data suggest gender specific differences in sympathetic and hemorrheological responses to mental stress in healthy young subjects. In men, sympathetic responses were related to hemorrheological responses, but not in women. It may be speculated whether such differences in stress responses may contribute to lower cardiovascular risk in premenopausal women than in men.


Current Hypertension Reports | 2010

The Prognostic Significance of Heart Rate for Cardiovascular Disease and Hypertension

Trygve B. Tjugen; Arnljot Flaa; Sverre E. Kjeldsen

Five decades ago, hypertension was a debated risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease. After further studies and the introduction of antihypertensive medications, few, if any, have doubted the important role hypertension plays as a cardiovascular risk factor. Today, a growing body of evidence emphasizes the relationship between heart rate and hypertension, and heart rate and cardiovascular disease, which makes the measurement of heart rate an important component of the cardiovascular risk assessment. Current European guidelines for managing arterial hypertension recommend the measurement of heart rate for risk stratification, but there still are no recommendations for treatment. This review discusses the evidence for a relationship between heart rate and cardiovascular mortality and morbidity and hypertension.


Biopsychosocial Medicine | 2007

Personality may influence reactivity to stress.

Arnljot Flaa; Øivind Ekeberg; Sverre E. Kjeldsen; Morten Rostrup

BackgroundPossible mechanisms behind psychophysiological hyperreactivity may be located at a cognitive-emotional level. Several personality traits have been associated with increased cardiovascular reactivity. Subjects with white coat hypertension, which may constitute a kind of hyperreactivity, are found to suppress their emotions and adapt to the surroundings to a larger extent than controls.We hypothesized in this study that a) stress reactivity is related to personality, and that b) responses to cold pressor test (CPT) and mental stress test (MST) are associated with different personality traits.Methods87 men were selected from the 1st, 50th and 99th percentile of a blood pressure screening. Cardiovascular and catecholamine responses to MST and CPT were recorded. Fifteen personality traits were assessed using the Karolinska Scale of Personality. Possible independent explanatory predictors for cardiovascular and catecholamine variables at baseline and during stress were analyzed in multiple linear regression analyses using a stepwise forward procedure.ResultsMultiple regression analyses showed that muscular tension (β = 0.298, p = 0.004), irritability (β = 0.282, p = 0.016), detachment (β = 0.272, p = 0.017), psychasthenia (β = 0.234, p = 0.031) and somatic anxiety (β = 0.225, p = 0.046) were significant explanatory variables of reactivity to CPT. During MST, verbal aggression (β = -0.252, 0.031) and detachment (β = 0.253, p = 0.044) were significant predictors of norepinephrine and diastolic blood pressure response, respectively.Based on KSP-trait quartiles, delta (Δ) systolic (p = 0.025) and Δ diastolic blood pressure (p = 0.003) during MST were related to detachment score, with the highest reactivity in the 4th quartile, while Δ norepinephrine was significantly related to muscular tension (p = 0.033). Δ systolic and Δ diastolic blood pressure responses to CPT were dependent on detachment (p = 0.049 and p = 0.011, respectively) and psychasthenia (p = 0.020 and p = 0.015), while high verbal aggression was associated with lower reactivity measured by Δ norepinephrine (p = 0.037).ConclusionThe present study indicates that stress reactivity is clearly related to different personality traits, without any single trait being dominant over others. Furthermore, personality seems to have as much, or even more, importance of predicting responses to CPT than responses to MST.

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Eigil Fossum

Oslo University Hospital

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