(Hypertension. 1997;30:746.)
© 1997 American Heart Association, Inc.
Articles |
From the Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Taipei Medical College and Hospital (N.-C.C., Z.-Y.L., T.-C.W.), and the Section of Cardiology, Wang Fang Hospital, Taipei Medical College (P.C.), Taipei, Taiwan.
Correspondence to Nen-Chung Chang, MD, PhD, Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Taipei Medical College Hospital, 2F, 29, Ln 13, Sec 2, Chin-San South Rd, Taipei 10603, Taiwan.
Abstract This study was to assess left
ventricular diastolic function in young
white-coat hypertensive subjects <50 years of age without
hypertrophy. Hypertensive patients (systolic or
diastolic blood pressure
140 or
90 mm Hg on all
three visits) were defined as white coat if their average 24-hour blood
pressure was <127/81 mm Hg and at least 18/16 mm Hg lower
than their average office values. We chose three groups balanced for
sex, age, and body mass index: 50 sustained hypertensives, 25
white-coat hypertensives, and 25 normotensives. Office blood pressure
was similar in white-coat and sustained hypertensives. Ambulatory blood
pressure was comparable in white-coat hypertensives and normotensives.
Compared with normotensives, white-coat hypertensives had more impaired
diastolic function: increased ratio of late to early
filling velocities, raised ratio of late to early time-velocity
integral, prolonged deceleration time, and lengthened isovolumic
relaxation time (P<.001, P<.001,
P=.002, and P<.001, respectively). No difference
was noticed between white-coat and sustained hypertensives. Compared
with normotensives, white-coat hypertensives had higher values of
plasma and urine norepinephrine (P<.001 and
P<.001, respectively), plasma and urine
aldosterone (P<.001 and P=.002,
respectively), plasma renin activity (P=.04), total
cholesterol (P=.001), and LDL
cholesterol (P<.001). No difference was
observed between white-coat and sustained hypertensives. Within
white-coat hypertensives, 24-hour urinary aldosterone
closely correlated with the ratio of late to early filling velocities
(P=.008), and plasma and 24-hour urinary
norepinephrine correlated well with total
cholesterol (P=.037 and P=.006,
respectively). No correlation was detected within the sustained
hypertensives and normotensives. Heightened neurohumoral activity
clearly supported the progression of diastolic dysfunction
and metabolic abnormality in white-coat hypertensives.
Key Words: hypertension, white coat ventricular function echocardiography blood pressure monitoring angiotensin system
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A. M. Grandi, R. Broggi, S. Colombo, R. Santillo, D. Imperiale, A. Bertolini, L. Guasti, and A. Venco Left Ventricular Changes in Isolated Office Hypertension: A Blood Pressure-Matched Comparison With Normotension and Sustained Hypertension Arch Intern Med, December 10, 2001; 161(22): 2677 - 2681. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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