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P3.02 MORNING BLOOD PRESSURE SURGE, BLOOD PRESSURE VARIABILITY AND AORTIC STIFFNESS IN ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION

Authors :
G. Bilo
Gianfranco Parati
Francesca Battista
Giacomo Pucci
Giuseppe Schillaci
Source :
Artery Research, Vol 7, Iss 10 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Morning blood pressure surge is associated with increased cardiovascular risk, possibly due to its ability to reflect short-term BP variability and/or its link with arterial stiffness. The link between morning BP surge and vascular stiffness is not defined. 689 untreated hypertensives (48±10 years, BP 149/92±17/10 mmHg) underwent c-f PWV and 24-h ambulatory BP measurement. Morning surge was calculated as: sleep-trough surge (STS, 2-hour average SBP after wake-up minus average of 3 SBP centered on the lowest nighttime reading), pre-awakening surge (PAS, 2-hour average SBP after wake-up minus 2-hour average SBP before wake-up), and rising BP surge (RBS, SBP on rising minus the lowest SBP in the 30’before). Average real variability (ARV, 24h average of the absolute differences between consecutive SBP), was considered a measure of short-term SBP variability. STS and RBS were directly correlated to cfPWV (r=0.17 and r=0.12,p39 mmHg) had higher age- and 24-h mean BP-adjusted cfPWV (9.73±2 vs 9.29±2 m/s, p=0.004), while no difference was found for the top quartile of PAS or RBS. In a multivariate regression, high STS values predicted a high cfPWV (β=0.08,p=0.038), independently of age, sex, 24-h mean BP and nocturnal BP reduction. After adding ARV (β=0.17,p

Details

ISSN :
18764401
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Artery Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe77dc89d01367dc5d6398d0de0c1464