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Controversies in Hypertension III: Dipping, Nocturnal Hypertension, and the Morning Surge

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE
Volume 136, Issue 7, Pages 629-637

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2023.02.018

Keywords

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; Dipping; Home blood pressure monitoring; Hypertension; Iso-lated nocturnal hypertension; Masked hypertension; Morning surge; Nocturnal hypertension; White coat hypertension

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A comprehensive approach for managing hypertension requires monitoring blood pressure at home or outside the clinic. Different phenotypes of patients (treated and untreated) have been identified, including normotension, hypertension, white-coat phenomena, and masked phenomena. Out-of-office pressure components, such as nighttime pressures, play an equally important role as mean values. Abnormalities in nighttime pressure have been associated with increased cardiovascular risk. It is important to determine the justification of altering therapy based solely on abnormal dipping, isolated nocturnal hypertension, or an abnormal surge through randomized trials.
A comprehensive approach to hypertension requires out-of-office determinations by home or ambulatory monitoring. The 4 phenotypes comparing office and out-of-office pressures in treated and untreated patients include normotension, hypertension, white-coat phenomena, and masked phenomena. Compo-nents of out-of-office pressure may be equally as important as mean values. Nighttime pressures are nor-mally 10%-20% lower than daytime (normal dipping) pressures. Abnormalities include dipping more than 20% (extreme dippers), less than 10 % (nondippers), or rising above daytime (risers) and have been associated with elevated cardiovascular risk. Nighttime pressure may be elevated (nocturnal hypertension) in isolation or together with daytime hypertension. Isolated nocturnal hypertension theoretically changes white-coat hypertension to true hypertension and normotension to masked hypertension. Pressure normally peaks in the morning hours (morning surge) when cardiovascular events are most common. Morning hypertension may result from residual nocturnal hypertension or an exaggerated surge and has been associ-ated with enhanced cardiovascular risk, especially in Asian populations. Randomized trials are needed to determine whether altering therapy based solely on either abnormal dipping, isolated nocturnal hyperten-sion, or an abnormal surge is justified. & COPY; 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. & BULL; The American Journal of Medicine (2023) 136:629-637

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