From the Department of Nephrology and Endocrinology, State University
Hospital, Copenhagen (P.C., B.F.-R.), and the Copenhagen City Heart Study,
Epidemiological Research Unit, Bispebjerg Municipal Hospital, University of
Copenhagen (J.S.J., K.B.-J., G.J.), Denmark.
Correspondence to Peter Clausen, MD, Department 2131 of Nephrology and Endocrinology, State University Hospital, Blegdamsvej 9, DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark.
AbstractA slightly elevated urinary
albumin excretion rate (UAER) is a predictor of atherosclerotic
cardiovascular disease. The mechanism is unknown, but
moderate office blood pressure elevation has been demonstrated as part
of a clustering of known atherosclerotic risk factors in subjects with
elevated UAER. Because 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure is a superior
predictor of hypertensive target organ involvement, we aimed to
investigate blood pressure profile in clinically healthy subjects with
elevated UAER. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring was performed with
a portable recorder in 27 subjects with an elevated UAER (>6.6
µg/min, overnight urine collection) and 46 normoalbuminuric
control subjects. Mean±SD systolic and diastolic
ambulatory blood pressures (24-hour) were significantly higher in
subjects with elevated UAER than in normoalbuminuric controls
(134±12 versus 128±11 mm Hg and 78±7 versus 75±6 mm Hg,
P<0.05), as were systolic and
diastolic blood pressure loads [median (range): 42% (6 to
94%) versus 23% (1 to 89%) and 20% (0 to 68%) versus 6% (0 to
62%), P<0.05]. The circadian variation of blood
pressure was normal in subjects with elevated UAER. However, the
increased urinary loss of albumin could not be solely related
to the higher blood pressure. In conclusion, apparently healthy
subjects with elevated UAER had slightly but significantly higher
24-hour systolic and diastolic blood pressure
levels in addition to increased blood pressure loads but normal
circadian variation. The demonstrated differences in blood pressure may
offer a partial explanation for the association between elevated
urinary albumin excretion and atherosclerotic
cardiovascular risk.
© 1998 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions
Ambulatory Blood Pressure and Urinary Albumin Excretion in Clinically Healthy Subjects
Key Words: blood pressure, ambulatory atherosclerosis cardiovascular disease risk factors albuminuria
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