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Insight into the 24‐hour ambulatory central blood pressure in adolescents and young adults
Authors:Angeliki Ntineri  Anastasios Kollias  Maria Elena Zeniodi  Andriani Vazeou  Alexandra Soldatou  George S. Stergiou
Affiliation:1. Hypertension Center STRIDE‐7, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, School of Medicine, Third Department of Medicine, Sotiria Hospital, Athens Greece ; 2. First Department of Pediatrics, Panagiotis and Aglaia Kyriakou Children''s Hospital, Athens Greece ; 3. Second Department of Pediatrics, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Panagiotis and Aglaia Kyriakou Children''s Hospital, Athens Greece
Abstract:This study attempted to investigate the behavior of 24‐hour central ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) in adolescents and young adults. Adolescents and young adults (age 10‐25 years) referred for elevated blood pressure (BP) and healthy volunteers had simultaneous 24‐hour peripheral (brachial) and central (aortic) ABP monitoring using the same automated upper‐arm cuff device (Mobil‐O‐Graph 24h PWA). Central BP was calculated by the device using two different calibration methods (C1SBP using peripheral systolic (pSBP)/diastolic BP and C2SBP using mean arterial/diastolic BP). A total of 136 participants (age 17.9 ± 4.7 years, 54% adolescents, 77% males, 25% volunteers, 34% with elevated peripheral ABP) were analyzed. Twenty‐four‐hour pSBP was higher than C1SBP, with this difference being more pronounced during daytime than nighttime (16.3 ± 4.5 and 10.5 ± 3.2 mm Hg, respectively, P < .001). Younger age, higher body height, and male gender were associated with greater systolic ABP amplification (pSBP‐C1SBP difference). C1SBP followed the variation pattern of pSBP, yet with smaller nighttime dip (8.4 ± 6.0% vs 11.9 ± 4.6%, P < .001), whereas C2SBP increased (2.4 ± 7.2%) during nighttime sleep (P < .001 for comparison with pSBP change). Older age remained independent determinant of larger nighttime BP fall for pSBP and C1SBP, whereas male gender predicted a larger nighttime C2SBP rise. These data suggest that the calibration method of the BP monitor considerably influences the diurnal variation in central BP, showing a lesser nocturnal dip than pSBP or even nocturnal BP rise, which are determined by the individual''s age and gender.
Keywords:adolescents   central blood pressure   circadian rhythm   dipping   diurnal variation   nocturnal
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