0000000000056259

AUTHOR

Maria Rosa Federico

Value of Home Blood Pressures as Predictor of Target Organ Damage in Mild Arterial Hypertension

Home blood pressure measurement has gained increasing importance for the management of hypertensive patients. The aim of our study was to compare levels of clinic (CBP), ambulatory (ABP), and home blood pressure (HBP) measurements, and their relationships with various indexes of target organ damage in I-II grade essential hypertension.Thirty-eight essential hypertensives underwent evaluation of clinic, ambulatory and home blood pressures. Each patient recorded HBP for 2 days with a digital BP monitor three times daily, the first time on the same day during which ABP monitoring was simultaneously performed. Moreover, in all subjects electrocardiogram recording, echocardiographic study, micro…

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Value of home blood pressure as predictor of target organ damage in mild arterial hypertension

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Relationships of “ambulatory” white coat effect with target organ damage in arterial hypertension

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Pulsatile and steady 24-h blood pressure components as determinants of left ventricular mass in young and middle-aged essential hypertensives

In order to explore the relations between left ventricularmass (LVM) and the pulsatile (pulse pressure) andsteady (mean pressure) components of the bloodpressure (BP) curve, 304 young and middle-agedessential hypertensive patients were studied by meansof 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring and echocardio-graphy. In the overall study population, both the BPcomponents showed significant correlations with LVM.These correlations were unevenly distributed in thesubgroups of subjects younger and in those older than50 years. While in this latter subgroup, in multivariateanalysis, both 24-h mean BP (24-MBP) (b¼0.27;P¼0.008) and 24-h pulse pressure (24-h PP) (b¼0.23;P¼0.02) were associated with LVM, in th…

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Pulsatile and steady 24-h blood pressure components as determinants of left ventricular mass in young and middle-aged essential hypertensives

In order to explore the relations between left ventricular mass (LVM) and the pulsatile (pulse pressure) and steady (mean pressure) components of the blood pressure (BP) curve, 304 young and middle-aged essential hypertensive patients were studied by means of 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring and echocardiography. In the overall study population, both the BP components showed significant correlations with LVM. These correlations were unevenly distributed in the subgroups of subjects younger and in those older than 50 years. While in this latter subgroup, in multivariate analysis, both 24-h mean BP (24-MBP) (beta = 0.27; P = 0.008) and 24-h pulse pressure (24-h PP) (beta = 0.23; P = 0.02) were a…

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Relationships between ambulatory white coat effect and left ventricular mass in arterial hypertension

The aim of our study was to analyze, in a group of 296 essential hypertensives, the relationship between left ventricular mass (LVM) and ambulatory white coat effect (WCE); that is the difference between the elevation of the first measurements of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and the mean daytime pressure. The study population was separated into two groups according to the median of the WCE. The LVM was greater in the groups with higher systolic and diastolic ambulatory WCE. The significant association between ambulatory WCE and LVM was confirmed by the results of multiple regression analysis, suggesting that ambulatory WCE may not be an innocent phenomenon.

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