Literature DB >> 2379947

Physiological, psychological, and behavioral factors and white coat hypertension.

W C Siegel1, J A Blumenthal, G W Divine.   

Abstract

Patients with hypertension in the clinic but not during daily activities ("white coat" hypertension) may be at lower risk of hypertensive morbidity and mortality than patients with hypertension in both settings ("persistent" hypertension). We hypothesized that the white coat phenomenon was due to greater blood pressure reactivity to the stress of a clinic visit and that, as a consequence, white coat hypertensive patients would display greater blood pressure reactivity to exercise and mental stress, as well as increased emotional reactivity and higher levels of anger, anxiety, or depression. We studied 89 patients with essential hypertension between 29 and 59 years old with ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, treadmill exercise testing with oxygen consumption measurement, mental stress testing (including mental arithmetic, public speaking, and video game tasks), and psychological testing (State-Trait Anxiety Scale, Cook-Medley Hostility Scale, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, emotional reactivity scale). We defined white coat hypertension as a mean ambulatory systolic blood pressure of 135 mm Hg or less and diastolic 85 mm Hg or less and persistent hypertension as a mean ambulatory systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg or more or diastolic 90 mm Hg or more. Forty-nine patients were classified as persistent hypertensives and 20 as white coat hypertensives. No significant differences were seen in demographic or clinical characteristics, fitness level, blood pressure response to exercise or mental stress, or psychological characteristics, except that white coat hypertensive patients had lower systolic blood pressures in the clinic and during exercise and greater variability of clinic diastolic blood pressures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2379947     DOI: 10.1161/01.hyp.16.2.140

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  10 in total

Review 1.  Endurance exercise training and treatment of hypertension. The controversy.

Authors:  R M Gilders; G A Dudley
Journal:  Sports Med       Date:  1992-02       Impact factor: 11.136

2.  Family history of hypertension, exercise training, and reactivity to stress in rats.

Authors:  J E Lawler; S K Naylor; C H Wang; R H Cox
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  1995

Review 3.  White Coat Hypertension and Cardiovascular Diseases: Innocent or Guilty.

Authors:  Mehran Abolbashari
Journal:  Curr Cardiol Rep       Date:  2018-03-08       Impact factor: 2.931

4.  Prevalence and predictors of white-coat response in patients with treated hypertension.

Authors:  M B MacDonald; G P Laing; M P Wilson; T W Wilson
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  1999-08-10       Impact factor: 8.262

5.  Changes in left ventricular structure and function in patients with white coat hypertension: cross sectional survey.

Authors:  M W Muscholl; H W Hense; U Bröckel; A Döring; G A Riegger; H Schunkert
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-08-29

6.  Franz Volhard lecture: should doctors still measure blood pressure? The missing patients with masked hypertension.

Authors:  Thomas G Pickering; William Gerin; Joseph E Schwartz; Tanya M Spruill; Karina W Davidson
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 4.844

Review 7.  Decoding white coat hypertension.

Authors:  Dennis A Bloomfield; Alex Park
Journal:  World J Clin Cases       Date:  2017-03-16       Impact factor: 1.337

8.  Rise of blood pressure value in young patients at first visit at a dental university hospital in Japan.

Authors:  Yasuyuki Kimura; Ken-Ichi Tonami; Jun Tsuruta; Kouji Araki
Journal:  J Dent Sci       Date:  2019-01-03       Impact factor: 2.080

9.  Ambulatory monitoring unmasks hypertension among kidney transplant patients: single center experience and review of the literature.

Authors:  Eitan Gluskin; Keren Tzukert; Irit Mor-Yosef Levi; Olga Gotsman; Itamar Sagiv; Roy Abel; Aharon Bloch; Dvorah Rubinger; Michal Aharon; Michal Dranitzki Elhalel; Iddo Z Ben-Dov
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2019-07-27       Impact factor: 2.388

10.  Blood pressure measurements taken by patients are similar to home and ambulatory blood pressure measurements.

Authors:  Angela M G Pierin; Edna C Ignez; Wilson Jacob Filho; Alfonso Júlio Guedes Barbato; Décio Mion
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 2.365

  10 in total

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