Literature DB >> 26727487

Night-time home versus ambulatory blood pressure in determining target organ damage.

Emmanuel A Andreadis1, Gerasimos Agaliotis, Anastasios Kollias, George Kolyvas, Apostolos Achimastos, George S Stergiou.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the association of night-time blood pressure (BP) assessed by home blood pressure (HBP) or ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) monitoring with preclinical target organ damage in untreated hypertension.
METHODS: Untreated hypertensive study participants were evaluated with ABP monitoring (24-h) and HBP monitoring during daytime (6 days, duplicate morning and evening measurements) and night-time (automated asleep measurements, three nights, 3-hourly measurements/night). Target organ damage was assessed by echocardiographic left ventricular mass index (LVMI), common carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT), urine albumin excretion (UAE), and ankle-brachial index (ABI).
RESULTS: A total of 131 study participants were analysed [mean age 52.1 ± 11.9 (SD) years, BMI 29.9 ± 5.3  kg/m2, men 58%, cardiovascular disease history 6.1%]. Daytime and night-time HBP were slightly higher than the respective ABP values (mean difference for systolic daytime/night-time 3.5 ± 10.6/2.6 ± 9.8  mmHg, P < 0.01 for both comparisons and diastolic -0.3 ± 6.8/1.2 ± 6.2  mmHg, P = NS/0.02, respectively). There was a strong correlation between daytime ABP and HBP (r = 0.71/0.72, systolic/diastolic), as well as between the respective night-time values (r = 0.80/0.79; all P < 0.01). Night-time ABP and HBP presented strong and comparable correlations with all the indices of preclinical target organ damage. In multivariate analyses, both LVMI (R2 = 0.26) and cIMT (R2 = 0.25) were determined by night-time systolic HBP, age and male sex; UAE (R2 = 0.28) by night-time systolic HBP and male sex; ABI (R2 = 0.20) by male sex and night-time home pulse pressure.
CONCLUSION: In untreated hypertensives, night-time BP assessed by home monitoring appears to be as good as night-time ambulatory monitoring in determining preclinical target organ damage.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26727487     DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000000815

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


  11 in total

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