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Day‐by‐day blood pressure variability in hospitalized patients with COVID‐19
Authors:Fei&#x;Ka Li  De&#x;Wei An  Qian&#x;Hui Guo  Yi&#x;Qing Zhang  Jia&#x;Ye Qian  Wei&#x;Guo Hu  Yan Li  Ji&#x;Guang Wang
Institution:1. Department of Geriatrics, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai China ; 2. The Shanghai Institute of Hypertension, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai China ; 3. Department of General Surgery, Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai China
Abstract:In a retrospective analysis, the authors investigated day‐by‐day blood pressure variability (BPV) and its association with clinical outcomes (critical vs. severe and discharged) in hospitalized patients with COVID‐19. The study participants were hospitalized in Tongji Hospital, Guanggu Branch, Wuhan, China, between February 1 and April 1, 2020. BPV was assessed as standard derivation (SD), coefficient of variation (CV), and variability independent of mean (VIM). The 79 participants included 60 (75.9%) severe patients discharged from the hospital after up to 47 days of hospitalization, and 19 (24.1%) critically ill patients transferred to other hospitals for further treatment (n = 13), admitted to ICU (n = 3) or died (n=3). Despite similar use of antihypertensive medication (47.4% vs. 41.7%) and mean levels of systolic/diastolic blood pressure (131.3/75.2 vs. 125.4/77.3 mmHg), critically ill patients, compared with severe and discharged patients, had a significantly (p ≤ .04) greater variability of systolic (SD 14.92 vs. 10.84 mmHg, CV 11.39% vs. 8.56%, and VIM 15.15 vs. 10.75 units) and diastolic blood pressure (SD 9.38 vs. 7.50 mmHg, CV 12.66% vs. 9.80%, and VIM 9.33 vs. 7.50 units). After adjustment for confounding factors, the odds ratios for critical versus severe and discharged patients for systolic BPV were 3.41 (95% confidence interval CI] 1.20‐9.66, = .02), 4.09 (95% CI 1.14‐14.67, = .03), and 2.81 (95% CI 1.12‐7.05, = .03) for each 5‐mmHg increment in SD, 5% increment in CV, and 5‐unit increment in VIM, respectively. Similar trends were observed for diastolic BPV indices (p ≤ .08). In conclusion, in patients with COVID‐19, BPV was greater and associated with worse clinical outcomes.
Keywords:blood pressure variability  COVID‐  19  inpatient  mortality
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