| Literature DB >> 31990898 |
George S Stergiou1, Paolo Palatini2, Pietro A Modesti3, Kei Asayama4, Roland Asmar5, Grzegorz Bilo6,7, Alejandro de la Sierra8, Eamon Dolan9, Geoffrey Head10, Kazuomi Kario11, Anastasios Kollias1, Efstathios Manios12, Anastasia S Mihailidou13, Martin Myers14, Teemu Niiranen15,16, Takayoshi Ohkubo4, Athanasios Protogerou17, Jiguang Wang18, Eoin O'Brien19, Gianfranco Parati6,7.
Abstract
: Blood pressure (BP) exhibits seasonal variation with lower levels at higher environmental temperatures and higher at lower temperatures. This is a global phenomenon affecting both sexes, all age groups, normotensive individuals, and hypertensive patients. In treated hypertensive patients it may result in excessive BP decline in summer, or rise in winter, possibly deserving treatment modification. This Consensus Statement by the European Society of Hypertension Working Group on BP Monitoring and Cardiovascular Variability provides a review of the evidence on the seasonal BP variation regarding its epidemiology, pathophysiology, relevance, magnitude, and the findings using different measurement methods. Consensus recommendations are provided for health professionals on how to evaluate the seasonal BP changes in treated hypertensive patients and when treatment modification might be justified. (i) In treated hypertensive patients symptoms appearing with temperature rise and suggesting overtreatment must be investigated for possible excessive BP drop due to seasonal variation. On the other hand, a BP rise during cold weather, might be due to seasonal variation. (ii) The seasonal BP changes should be confirmed by repeated office measurements; preferably with home or ambulatory BP monitoring. Other reasons for BP change must be excluded. (iii) Similar issues might appear in people traveling from cold to hot places, or the reverse. (iv) BP levels below the recommended treatment goal should be considered for possible down-titration, particularly if there are symptoms suggesting overtreatment. SBP less than 110 mmHg requires consideration for treatment down-titration, even in asymptomatic patients. Further research is needed on the optimal management of the seasonal BP changes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31990898 DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000002341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hypertens ISSN: 0263-6352 Impact factor: 4.844