4.2 Article

Reproducibility of nocturnal blood pressure fall in early phases of untreated essential hypertension: a prospective observational study

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN HYPERTENSION
Volume 18, Issue 7, Pages 503-509

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jhh.1001681

Keywords

ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; dipper; nondipper; untreated hypertension

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A number of studies have shown that a smaller than normal nocturnal blood pressure ( BP) decrease is associated with cardiovascular disease. However, no large prospective studies have examined the reliability of nocturnal dipping within individuals. The aim of our study was to investigate the short-term variability of nocturnal BP fall in a large cohort of patients with recently diagnosed essential hypertension. In all, 414 uncomplicated never treated hypertensive patients referred to our outpatient hypertension hospital clinic ( mean age 46712 years; 257 M, 157 F) prospectively underwent: ( 1) repeated clinic BP measurements; ( 2) routine examinations recommended by WHO/ISH guidelines; and ( 3) ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) twice within a 4-week period. Dipping pattern was defined as a reduction in the average systolic and diastolic BP at night greater than 10% compared to average daytime values. Overall, 311 patients (75.1%) showed no change in their diurnal variations in BP. Of the 278 patients who had a dipping pattern on the first ABPM, 219 (78.7%) confirmed this type of profile on the second ABPM, while 59 ( 21.3%) showed a nondipping pattern. Among 37 dipper patients with >20% of nocturnal systolic BP decrease ( extreme dippers), only 16 ( 43.2%) had this marked fall in BP on the second ABPM. Of the 136 patients who had a nondipping pattern on the first ABPM, 92 (67.6%) confirmed their initial profile on the second ABPM, while 44 (32.4%) did not. Patients with reproducible nondipping profile were older ( 48712 years) than those with reproducible dipping profile (44 +/- 12 years, P<0.05). These findings indicate that: ( 1) short-term reproducibility of nocturnal fall in BP in untreated middle-aged hypertensives is rather limited: overall, one-fourth of patients changed their initial dipping patterns when they were studied again after a few weeks; ( 2) this was particularly true for extreme dipping and nondipping patterns; ( 3) abnormalities in nocturnal BP fall, assessed by a single ABPM, cannot be taken as independent predictors of increased cardiovascular risk.

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