4.2 Article

Reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure, assessed by two ambulatory blood pressure monitorings and cardiac alterations in early phases of untreated essential hypertension

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN HYPERTENSION
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages 245-251

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.jhh.1001546

Keywords

nondippers; ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; cardiac structure

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To investigate whether in recently diagnosed essential hypertensives a reduced nocturnal fall in blood pressure (BP), established on the basis of two 24-h ambulatory blood pressure monitorings (ABPM) is related to a greater cardiovascular damage. In all, 355 consecutive, recently diagnosed, never-treated essential hypertensives referred for the first time to our outpatient clinic were included in the study. Each patient underwent the following procedures: (1) two 24-h ABPMs performed within 3 weeks, (2) 24-h urinary collection for micro-albuminuria, (3) nonmydriatic photography of ocular fundi, (4) echocardiography, (5) carotid ultrasonography. We defined nondipping profile as a night-day systolic and diastolic fall less than or equal to10 % (mean of two ABPMs). A dipper BP profile was found in 238 patients, whereas in 117 patients a nondipper profile was present. The two groups were similar for age, gender, body mass index, smoking habit, clinic BP, 48-h BP and heart rate, while, by definition, night-time systolic and diastolic BP were significantly higher in nondippers than in dippers (130/ 81 vs 121/74 mmHg, P<0.0001). The prevalence of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) defined by four different criteria: (a) LV mass index (LVMI) greater than or equal to125g/m(2) in both genders; (b) LVMI greater than or equal to134 gm(2) in men and greater than or equal to110 in women; (c) LVMI greater than or equal to125 g/m(2) in men and greater than or equal to110 g/m(2) in women; (d) LVMI greater than or equal to51 g/m(2.7) in men and greater than or equal to47 g/m(2.7) in women was significantly higher in nondippers than in dippers (a: 12 vs 7%, P < 0.05; b: 16 vs 7%, P < 0.01; c: 20 vs 11%, P < 0.01; d: 35 vs 23% P < 0.02) and this finding was associated with a significant increase in aortic root and left atrium dimensions. There were no differences between the two groups in the prevalence of carotid and retinal changes and microalbuminuria. In conclusion our findings suggest that never-treated hypertensives with a reduced BP fall in the night time, defined on the basis of two ABPMs, have a higher prevalence of TOD than dippers, in terms of echocardiographic LVH. In this population setting, cardiac structural alterations are a more sensitive marker of the impact of the nocturnal BP load on cardiovascular system than other extracardiac signs of TOD.

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