Search results for "AMBULATORY"
showing 10 items of 429 documents
Relationship Between Ambulatory Artery Stiffness Index and Glomerular Filtration Rate in Essential Hypertension
2007
Twenty-four-hour blood pressure profile in idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder
2022
Abstract Study Objectives To determine whether autonomic dysfunction in idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) affects circadian blood pressure (BP) profile. Methods Twenty-one iRBD (mean age 68.8 ± 6.4, mean age at onset 62.2 ± 9.3), 21 drug-free de novo Parkinson’s disease (PD) and 21 control participants (HCs), comparable for age and sex, underwent 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring. A prospective follow-up study was performed to evaluate the occurrence of neurodegenerative disorders in the iRBD cohort. Results In the iRBD group, nighttime systolic BP (SBP) was higher (124.0 ± 20.0, p = .026), nocturnal BP decrease lower (4.0 ± 8.7% for SBP and 8.7 ± 8.0% for diastolic BP [DBP], p = .0…
Blood-pressure variability in patients with obstructive sleep apnea: current perspectives
2018
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is often associated with hypertension and other cardiovascular diseases. Blood pressure (BP) variability is part of the assessment of cardiovascular risk. In OSA, BP variability has been studied mainly as very short-term (beat-by-beat) and short-term (24-hour BP profile) variability. BP measured on consecutive heartbeats has been demonstrated to be highly variable, due to repeated peaks during sleep, so that an accurate assessment of nocturnal BP levels in OSA may require peculiar methodologies. In 24-hour recordings, BP frequently features a "nondipping" profile, ie, <10% fall from day to night, which may increase cardiovascular risk and occurrence of major…
The Role of ABPM in Evaluation of Hypertensive Target-Organ Damage
2013
Casual blood pressure measurement has provided the basis for the present knowledge of the potential risk associated with hypertension and has guided patient management for many years. The possibility of carrying out repeated ambulatory blood pressure measurements using automatic or semiautomatic devices allows for the gathering of more representative values of blood pressure and for observing the behavior of blood pressure during both moments of activity as well as rest. Ambulatory blood pressure measurement is now increasingly recognized as being indispensable to the diagnosis and management of hypertension, and it has contributed significantly to our understanding of hypertension. Likewis…
Pulsatile and steady 24-h blood pressure components as determinants of left ventricular mass in young and middle-aged essential hypertensives
2003
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…
Relationship between aortic stiffness and albumin excretion rate in untreated essential hypertensive patients
2004
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is ready to replace clinic blood pressure in the diagnosis of hypertension: con side of the argument.
2014
The San Francisco experience with Perloff and Sokolow was the starting point for the clinical application of ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) measurement. Using a semiautomatic device, the superiority of ABP to office measurement was demonstrated in the relationship with hypertension-induced organ damage1 and in the risk for cardiovascular events.2 This seminal study impelled an issue with the largest production and impact in the field of hypertension in recent decades, boosting research and having an enormous influence on daily clinical practice. Initially restricted to specialized clinics, ABP monitoring (ABPM) has largely expanded to primary care in many countries. Similarly, scientific p…
Blood Pressure Measurement Before and After Intervention
2016
The complexity and the uncertainties about long-term effect of the invasive interventions to treat essential hypertension (HTN) require a precise diagnosis about the real “resistance” to the antihypertensive treatment given, and it is defined when a therapeutic strategy that includes appropriate lifestyle measures plus a diuretic and two other antihypertensive drugs belonging to different classes at adequate doses fails to lower systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) values to <140 and 90 mmHg, respectively. Consequently, in the process of diagnosis and follow-up, blood pressure (BP) measurement is the first step that is not exempt of difficulties due to the variab…
Morning and smooth 24-h ambulatory blood pressure control is not achieved in general practice: results from the SURGE observational study.
2013
BACKGROUND The aim of this large-scale, practice-based observational study [Survey with HBPM and ABPM Under Real clinical conditions in General practice to Evaluate BP control in the early morning (SURGE)] was to ascertain the degree of morning and 24-h ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) control in hypertensive patients. METHODS Hypertensive patients [with uncontrolled clinic blood pressure (BP) >140/90 mmHg at screening] from nine different countries were included. Ambulatory BP monitoring was performed over 24 h at 15-min intervals during the day and at 20-min intervals during the night. Assessments included morning (0600-1159 h) and daytime ABP control (BP < 135/85 mmHg), and 24-h ABP contr…
Tratamientos terapéutica de la fisura anal crónica
2005
Current treatment of chronic anal fissure continues to be based on conventional conservative measures in a high percentage of cases. What is known as chemical sphincterotomy aims to achieve a temporary decrease of anal pressures that allows fissures to heal. There are various alternatives such as nitroglycerine or diltiazem ointment and botulinum toxin injections. However, because of collateral effects and recurrences in the medium term, the definitive role of these treatments remains to be elucidated. Nevertheless, chemical sphincterotomy should be the first option in patients with a high risk of incontinence. "Open" or "closed" lateral internal sphincterotomy performed in the ambulatory s…