Literature DB >> 12135311

Clinical significance of blood pressure response triggered by a doctor's visit in patients with essential hypertension.

Masanori Munakata1, Yuki Saito, Tohru Nunokawa, Nobuhiko Ito, Shin Fukudo, Kaoru Yoshinaga.   

Abstract

The clinical significance of the pressor response triggered by blood pressure measurement, the so-called "white-coat effect," was studied in relation to left ventricular structure and function in patients with essential hypertension. We studied 75 consecutive, never-before treated patients with essential hypertension (54 +/- 2 (SE) years; 31 men). Beat-to-beat blood pressure (Finapres) was monitored at rest, during conventional blood pressure measurement by a doctor, and during a mental stress test. The left ventricular mass index and diastolic function (EIA ratio) were determined by echocardiography. The systolic blood pressure response triggered by the doctor's visit (deltaSBP) correlated positively with the left ventricular mass index (r= 0.326, p<0.03) and negatively with the EIA ratio (r=-0.325, p<0.02). A positive relationship between the deltaSBP and left ventricular mass index was observed in men (r=0.556, p<0.01) but not in women. The greater ASBP also was associated with lower EIA ratio in women (r=-0.434, p<0.02). The deltaSBP correlated with the mental stress-induced increase in systolic blood pressure in men (r=0.586, p<0.005) but not in women (r=0.148, n.s.). Blood pressures outside the clinic were higher in men than in women (p<0.05 for systolic and p<0.005 for diastolic) despite the similar level of clinic blood pressures between the sexes. Stepwise multiple linear regression analysis showed that the deltaSBP was an independent predictor of the left ventricular mass index in men (beta=0.783, p=0.0009) and of the EIA ratio in women (beta=-0.003, p=0.05). These data suggest that the pressor response triggered by a doctor's visit has clinical significance in never-before treated hypertensive patients, possibly because it mirrors real-life stress reactivity in men.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12135311     DOI: 10.1291/hypres.25.343

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertens Res        ISSN: 0916-9636            Impact factor:   3.872


  3 in total

1.  Pre-anesthesia systolic blood pressure increases with age regardless of sex.

Authors:  Ju Mizuno; Shinya Kato; Tomoko Sato; Shigehito Sawamura
Journal:  J Anesth       Date:  2012-06-15       Impact factor: 2.078

2.  White coat effect and white coat hypertension: one and the same?

Authors:  As Ramli; N Halmey; Cl Teng
Journal:  Malays Fam Physician       Date:  2008-12-31

Review 3.  Sources of inaccuracy in the measurement of adult patients' resting blood pressure in clinical settings: a systematic review.

Authors:  Noa Kallioinen; Andrew Hill; Mark S Horswill; Helen E Ward; Marcus O Watson
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 4.844

  3 in total

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