Literature DB >> 6510123

Circadian systolic and diastolic hyperbaric indices of high school and college students.

F Halberg, A Ahlgren, E Haus.   

Abstract

Apparently healthy North American (mostly Minnesotan) students, 117 boys and 147 girls, 14-21 years of age, self-measured blood pressure at 1 h or longer intervals for spans ranging from 24 h over several weeks to much longer spans. Each series was analyzed for a circadian rhythm by the single cosinor fit of a 24-h cosine curve. The mesor, amplitude and acrophase thus obtained were used for the determination of a mean acrometron, i.e. the mean of the sum of mesor + amplitude for each individual investigated. A circadian hyperbaric impact (HBI) was then computed as the tension-time product represented by the area under the fitted cosine curve and above the acrometron as a critical value. A highly skewed distribution of these HBIs was found: the HBI for systolic and diastolic blood pressure equalled 0 in 64 and 49 of the series on boys and 78 and 72 of the series on girls, respectively. Individuals singled out as outliers by the HBI are recommended for traking, some with and some without eventual intervention. The overall HBI is a step toward assessing the values that may lie above some group reference value, assuming a fixed rather than a likely-changing threshold for the damaging effect and further assuming the linearity of any impact, if not damage, along the scales of pressure and time. The overall HBI, based on such unvalidated approximations, will have to be complemented by an index related to the changes that lie outside a chronodesm with focus both upon the pressures that are too low as well as upon those that are too high.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1984        PMID: 6510123

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chronobiologia        ISSN: 0390-0037


  6 in total

Review 1.  Clinical relevance of about-yearly changes in blood pressure and the environment.

Authors:  F Halberg; G Cornélissen; E Haus; G Northrup; A Portela; H Wendt; K Otsuka; Y Kumagai; Y Watanabe; R Zaslavskaya
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 3.787

Review 2.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: a versatile tool for evaluating and managing hypertension in children.

Authors:  Alisa A Acosta; Karen L McNiece
Journal:  Pediatr Nephrol       Date:  2008-02-23       Impact factor: 3.714

3.  Effect of essential fatty acid blend on circadian variations of ambulatory blood pressure in patients with essential hypertension and coronary artery disease risk markers.

Authors:  Kshitij Bhardwaj; Narsingh Verma; Rakesh Trivedi; Shipra Bhardwaj
Journal:  J Hum Hypertens       Date:  2021-03-23       Impact factor: 3.012

4.  Hyperbaric area index calculated from ABPM elucidates the condition of CKD patients: the CKD-JAC study.

Authors:  Satoshi Iimuro; Enyu Imai; Tsuyoshi Watanabe; Kosaku Nitta; Tadao Akizawa; Seiichi Matsuo; Hirofumi Makino; Yasuo Ohashi; Akira Hishida
Journal:  Clin Exp Nephrol       Date:  2014-03-30       Impact factor: 2.801

5.  Variations in 7-day/24-h circadian pattern of ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate of type 2 diabetes patients.

Authors:  Shipra Bhardwaj; Narsingh Verma; Baby Anjum; Kshitij Bhardwaj
Journal:  J Diabetes Investig       Date:  2014-04-02       Impact factor: 4.232

6.  Clinical Utility of 24-h Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Hospitalized Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease.

Authors:  Santosh B Salagre; Nigarbi N A Ansari; Vandana S Mali
Journal:  Indian J Nephrol       Date:  2021-02-08
  6 in total

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