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(Hypertension. 1999;34:267-272.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Scientific Contributions |
From the Blood Pressure Unit, Beaumont Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Correspondence to Eoin O'Brien, MB, Blood Pressure Unit, Beaumont Hospital, PO Box 1297, Beaumont Road, Dublin 9, Ireland. E-mail eobrien{at}iol.ie
AbstractWhite coat hypertension
(WCH) is common in referred hypertensive patients. Ambulatory blood
pressure monitoring (ABPM) is not free from the white coat syndrome. We
examined the use of the elevation of the first and last measurements of
ABPM for diagnosis of WCH in a hypertensive population that had been
referred to a hospital-based hypertension unit. Data were obtained on
1350 patients for clinic and ABPM parameters. WCH, as
diagnosed by conventional clinic blood pressure (BP) measurement, was
compared with a variety of alternative methods determined from ABPM. In
all cases, mean daytime pressure was <135 mm Hg/85 mm Hg
with an elevation of clinic BP
140 mm Hg systolic or
90 mm Hg diastolic. The definitions tested for this
elevation were first hour mean pressure, first reading, maximum reading
in first hour, last hour mean pressure, last reading, maximum reading
in the last hour and maximum reading in first or last hour. Elevation
of the maximum pressure in the first hour or last hour above 140
mm Hg systolic or 90 mm Hg diastolic showed
a high level of agreement (
=0.91) with classical WCH for diagnosis
of the white coat syndrome. Termed ambulatory white coat hypertension,
patients with this finding were older than classic white coat patients
and had higher daytime (127±6/78±5 mm Hg versus
121±5.5/74±6 mm Hg, P<0.005 for
systolic and diastolic) and nighttime
(114±11/67±8 mm Hg versus 106±9/61±6 mm Hg,
P<0.005 for systolic and diastolic)
pressures. They also had a significantly greater Sokolow-Lyon index
(leads V1+V5, 21±7 mV versus 18±6 mV).
Elevation of BP above 140 mm Hg systolic or 90
mm Hg diastolic in the first or last hour of monitoring
diagnoses patients with a white coat response in whom there is a higher
BP profile than in patients with classic white coat response alone. We
suggest, therefore, that this is a better measure of the white
coat phenomenon.
Key Words: blood pressure monitoring, ambulatory hypertension, white coat
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