Literature DB >> 14597847

A comparison of awake-sleep blood pressure variation between normotensive Japanese-American and Caucasian women in Hawaii.

Daniel E Brown1, Gary D James, Sue L Aki, Phoebe S Mills, Michaelyn B Etrata.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare awake-sleep ambulatory blood pressure variation between Japanese-American and Caucasian women in Hawaii, specifically determining whether Japanese-Americans have reduced dipping of blood pressure during sleep, as is found in comparisons of Japanese and US samples.
METHODS: Normotensive school teachers from East Hawaii who were either of Japanese-American (n = 70) or Caucasian (n = 48) ethnicity were recruited. They wore an ambulatory blood pressure monitor (Spacelabs 90207) that took measurements every 15 min during waking hours and every 30 min during sleep for a 24-h period on a normal workday. All subjects provided demographic information and underwent a series of anthropometric measurements the day before monitoring. Japanese-American subjects also answered questionnaires relating to cultural identity and migration history.
RESULTS: The Japanese-American women had significantly higher mean diastolic (P < 0.01) blood pressure during sleep. These ethnic differences in sleep blood pressure persisted when analyses controlled for age, body mass index, and the waist-hip circumference ratio. There were also significant differences in the proportion by which blood pressure dipped from waking to sleeping, with the Japanese-American women dipping significantly less than the Caucasian women (P < 0.05 systolic, P < 0.001 diastolic).
CONCLUSIONS: Normotensive Japanese-American women have higher sleep pressure, and a smaller awake-sleep dip, in pressure than Caucasian women. The relative elevation of blood pressure in Japanese-American women during sleep, but not at other times of the day, is similar to the pattern seen among Japanese women in Japan.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14597847     DOI: 10.1097/00004872-200311000-00013

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Hypertens        ISSN: 0263-6352            Impact factor:   4.844


  2 in total

1.  Relationship between waking-sleep blood pressure and catecholamine changes in African-American and European-American women.

Authors:  Helene M van Berge-Landry; Dana H Bovbjerg; Gary D James
Journal:  Blood Press Monit       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 1.444

2.  Ethnic differences in inter- and intra-situational blood pressure variation: Comparisons among African-American, Hispanic-American, Asian-American, and European-American women.

Authors:  Gary D James; Dana H Bovbjerg; Leah A Hill
Journal:  Am J Hum Biol       Date:  2016-05-25       Impact factor: 1.937

  2 in total

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