Abstract: | Twenty-one elderly patients with essential hypertension, all over 65 years of age, were subjected to automated noninvasive 24-hour blood pressure measurement. Readings were obtained every 7.5 minutes throughout the day. The data were analyzed with respect to: correlation between office and ambulatory pressure measurements; possible differences in the circadian blood pressure pattern; and the existence of hypertensive or atherosclerotic cardiovascular complications. In all patients, the office systolic pressures were significantly higher than the ambulatory daytime pressures; diastolic pressures were similar. At night, two patterns of blood pressure emerged. In one there was a further fall in both systolic and diastolic pressures to normotensive levels, whereas the other pattern revealed no change in diastolic pressure, although systolic pressure increased significantly to similar levels as measured in the office. The prevalence of hypertensive or atherosclerotic cardiovascular complications in the patients with the first pattern was significantly less than in the group of patients with the second pattern (chi square, P less than 0.025). The data reported herein indicate that ambulatory blood pressure monitoring may help in the overall clinical evaluation of elderly patients with hypertension. |