BACKGROUND: In a previous analysis of the Progetto Ipertensione Umbria Monitoraggio Ambulatoriale we found a higher rate of cardiovascular morbid events among hypertensive nondippers than we did among dippers (5.86 versus 1.18 events per 100 person-years, P = 0.0002) for women, whereas the difference between the two groups was smaller and not statistically significant for men (4.15 versus 2.48 events per 100 person-years). These differences held in a multivariate analysis after adjustment for several confounders including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. In another analysis, the rate of occurrence of cardiovascular end-points was higher among nondippers than it was among dippers regardless of the definition of day and night (0600-2200 h and 2200-0600 h, awake and asleep, and 1000-2000 h and 2400-0600 h) and of the dividing line between dippers and nondippers (10 versus 0% day-night difference in blood pressure). OBJECTIVE: To test in a subsequent analysis based on a larger sample and a longer follow-up period, for both sexes, the prognostic value of a blunted diurnal rhythm of blood pressure. METHOD: We used the night: day ratio of ambulatory blood pressure, a continuous and normally distributed variable. RESULTS: A night: day systolic blood pressure ratio > 0.899 for men and > 0.909 for women (upper tertiles of distributions) identified a subset of subjects with greater than normal cardiovascular risk for any level of concomitant risk factors, wherease the hight:day diastolic blood pressure ratio was not statistically significant as an independent predictor. The excess risk for subjects in the upper tertile of the night: day systolic blood pressure ratio held after adjustment for several risk markers, including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that a blunted reduction in blood pressure from day to night predicts an increased cardiovascular morbidity at any level of concomitant risk factors including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. Nondippers can be defined in terms of a night: day ambulatory systolic blood pressure ratio > 0.899 for men and > 0.909 for women, regardless of the diastolic blood pressure profile.
BACKGROUND: In a previous analysis of the Progetto Ipertensione Umbria Monitoraggio Ambulatoriale we found a higher rate of cardiovascular morbid events among hypertensive nondippers than we did among dippers (5.86 versus 1.18 events per 100 person-years, P = 0.0002) for women, whereas the difference between the two groups was smaller and not statistically significant for men (4.15 versus 2.48 events per 100 person-years). These differences held in a multivariate analysis after adjustment for several confounders including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. In another analysis, the rate of occurrence of cardiovascular end-points was higher among nondippers than it was among dippers regardless of the definition of day and night (0600-2200 h and 2200-0600 h, awake and asleep, and 1000-2000 h and 2400-0600 h) and of the dividing line between dippers and nondippers (10 versus 0% day-night difference in blood pressure). OBJECTIVE: To test in a subsequent analysis based on a larger sample and a longer follow-up period, for both sexes, the prognostic value of a blunted diurnal rhythm of blood pressure. METHOD: We used the night: day ratio of ambulatory blood pressure, a continuous and normally distributed variable. RESULTS: A night: day systolic blood pressure ratio > 0.899 for men and > 0.909 for women (upper tertiles of distributions) identified a subset of subjects with greater than normal cardiovascular risk for any level of concomitant risk factors, wherease the hight:day diastolic blood pressure ratio was not statistically significant as an independent predictor. The excess risk for subjects in the upper tertile of the night: day systolic blood pressure ratio held after adjustment for several risk markers, including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that a blunted reduction in blood pressure from day to night predicts an increased cardiovascular morbidity at any level of concomitant risk factors including average 24 h ambulatory blood pressure. Nondippers can be defined in terms of a night: day ambulatory systolic blood pressure ratio > 0.899 for men and > 0.909 for women, regardless of the diastolic blood pressure profile.
Authors: Min Yin Goh; Melinda S Millard; Edmund C K Wong; David J Berlowitz; Marnie Graco; Rachel M Schembri; Douglas J Brown; Albert G Frauman; Christopher J O'Callaghan Journal: Spinal Cord Date: 2018-03-02 Impact factor: 2.772
Authors: Sarah J Mi; Nichole R Kelly; Robert J Brychta; Anne Claire Grammer; Manuela Jaramillo; Kong Y Chen; Laura A Fletcher; Shanna B Bernstein; Amber B Courville; Lisa M Shank; Jeremy J Pomeroy; Sheila M Brady; Miranda M Broadney; Marian Tanofsky-Kraff; Jack A Yanovski Journal: Pediatr Obes Date: 2019-01-31 Impact factor: 4.000
Authors: Saiful A Mir; Ying Li; Jacob D Story; Soma Bal; Linda Awdishu; Anneke A Street; Ravindra L Mehta; Prabhleen Singh; Sucheta M Vaingankar Journal: J Hypertens Date: 2018-05 Impact factor: 4.844
Authors: Scott J Denardo; Yan Gong; Rhonda M Cooper-DeHoff; Csaba Farsang; Matyas Keltai; László Szirmai; Franz H Messerli; Anthony A Bavry; Eileen M Handberg; Giuseppe Mancia; Carl J Pepine Journal: PLoS One Date: 2015-04-02 Impact factor: 3.240