Musso NR, Vergassola C, Garbero G, Lotti G
Nondipper hypertensive patients and ambulatory blood pressure reproducibility
12th Annual ASH Meeting
Am J Hypertens (Apr) 10:74A 1997

The short and long term reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure in untreated hypertensive subjects is quite high and certainly exceeds that of office blood pressure. This fact as well as the virtual lack of a placebo effect with ambulatory monitoring allow the use of smaller numbers of patients in clinical hypertension studies without sacrificing statistical power. However the reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure in subjects on drug therapy is less well studied. Furthermore, the longitudinal stability of the dipper status is also not well studied.

The authors of this paper studied 540 patients with treated essential hypertension on two occasions 8-12 weeks apart. They found that there was a good correlation of blood pressure averages between the two studies and that there was a small but significant decrease in ambulatory blood pressure averages. The authors also found that significant crossover occurred from dipper to non-dipper categories and vice versa from the first to the second blood pressure study.

Comment: These results show that in treated hypertensives the reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure and the dipper status is less than in untreated patients. Factors that may contribute to this reduced reproducibility may include noncompliance, differing levels of activity and sleep. The authors do not provide the absolute changes in nocturnal BP dip to compare the two ambulatory studies. The designation of dipper and non dipper is somewhat arbitrary and further study is needed of its independent use as a prognostic factor. (George Mansoor, M.D., University of Connecticut)

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12th Annual ASH Meeting
H: Exam and lab tests : Ambulatory monitoring