Literature DB >> 9383171

Undiagnosed sleep-disordered breathing among male nondippers with essential hypertension.

F Portaluppi1, F Provini, P Cortelli, G Plazzi, N Bertozzi, R Manfredini, C Fersini, E Lugaresi.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A blunting of the nocturnal fall in arterial blood pressure is found in a minority of patients (nondippers) with essential hypertension. We tested whether sleep-disordered breathing (snoring and apnea or hypopnea) might explain such a finding for male patients, among whom its prevalence is much higher. SETTING AND PATIENTS: We studied 100 new cases of hypertension in men, observed consecutively by a local group of general practitioners and diagnosed essential hypertensives in a referral clinic. By using 24 h ambulatory blood pressure monitoring with a SpaceLabs 90207 device, 15 patients were classified initially nondippers (daytime ambulatory blood pressure > or = 136/87 mmHg; night-time decrease by < 10% of the daytime mean), but only 11 were confirmed to be nondippers by continuous blood pressure monitoring with a Finapres device. Ten dippers matched by age, body mass index and mean 24 h blood pressure were used as controls. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Parameters of nocturnal polysomnography.
RESULTS: During polysomnography, the nondippers exhibited a blunting of the sleep-related fall in blood pressure and an increased variability in blood pressure associated with sleep-disordered breathing (heavy snoring for all, with an apnea or hypopnea index > 10 in 10 cases). Six of the control patients breathed normally and four snored nonapneically. There was a normal fall in nocturnal blood pressure in all 10 cases.
CONCLUSIONS: The nondipper condition appears to be associated with undiagnosed apneic snoring for an unselected population of previously untreated male subjects with a diagnosis of essential hypertension. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring of such patients is of limited diagnostic value.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9383171     DOI: 10.1097/00004872-199715110-00006

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


  27 in total

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Authors:  D S Silverberg; A Oksenberg
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2001-06       Impact factor: 5.369

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Review 5.  Chronotherapy for Hypertension.

Authors:  N P Bowles; S S Thosar; M X Herzig; S A Shea
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6.  Obstructive sleep apnoea and Type 2 diabetes mellitus: are they connected?

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Review 7.  Sleep, death, and the heart.

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8.  Night-time systolic blood pressure and subclinical cerebrovascular disease: the Cardiovascular Abnormalities and Brain Lesions (CABL) study.

Authors:  Koki Nakanishi; Zhezhen Jin; Shunichi Homma; Mitchell S V Elkind; Tatjana Rundek; Joseph E Schwartz; Tetz C Lee; Aylin Tugcu; Mitsuhiro Yoshita; Charles DeCarli; Clinton B Wright; Ralph L Sacco; Marco R Di Tullio
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Review 9.  Chemoreflexes, sleep apnea, and sympathetic dysregulation.

Authors:  Meghna P Mansukhani; Tomas Kara; Sean M Caples; Virend K Somers
Journal:  Curr Hypertens Rep       Date:  2014-09       Impact factor: 5.369

Review 10.  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

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