| Literature DB >> 29517128 |
Jonathan C L Rodrigues1,2,3, Antonio Matteo Amadu1,4, Amardeep Ghosh Dastidar1,5, Iwan Harries1,5, Amy E Burchell3,5, Laura E K Ratcliffe3, Emma C Hart2,3, Mark C K Hamilton6, Julian F R Paton2,3, Angus K Nightingale3,5, Nathan E Manghat1,6.
Abstract
We investigate the impact of dipper status on cardiac structure with cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR). Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and 1.5T CMR were performed in 99 tertiary hypertension clinic patients. Subgroup analysis by extreme dipper (n = 9), dipper (n = 39), non-dipper (n = 35) and reverse dipper (n = 16) status was performed, matched in age, gender and BMI. Left ventricular (LV) mass was significantly higher for extreme dippers than dippers after correction for covariates (100 ± 6 g/m2 vs 79 ± 3 g/m2 , P = .004). Amongst extreme dippers and dippers (n = 48), indexed LV mass correlated positively with the extent of nocturnal blood pressure dipping (R = .403, P = .005). On post-hoc ANCOVA, the percentage of nocturnal dip had significant effect on indexed LV mass (P = .008), but overall SBP did not (P = .348). In the tertiary setting, we found a larger nocturnal BP drop was associated with more LV hypertrophy. If confirmed in larger studies, this may have implications on nocturnal dosing of anti-hypertensive medications. ©2018 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Entities:
Keywords: ambulatory blood pressure; hypertrophy; myocardial strain; nocturnal dip
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29517128 PMCID: PMC8030898 DOI: 10.1111/jch.13235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich) ISSN: 1524-6175 Impact factor: 3.738