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  Vol. 4 No. 8, August 1995 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Clinical Use of Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring

A Review of Value in Patient Care

Alvin P. Shapiro, MD; J. Kimberly Karschner, MD; Daniel J. Glunk, MD; Bruce M. Barnhill

Arch Fam Med. 1995;4(8):691-696.


Abstract

Objective
To examine the value of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in routine clinical use.

Design
We retrospectively reviewed 350 determinations made over a 4-year period.

Setting and Patients
A practice-based sample of patients attending the Hypertension Outpatient Clinic.

Results
Successful records were obtained in 346 of these procedures and night/sleep recordings were accomplished in 320. Monitor readings compared satisfactorily with auscultatory determinations.

Declines in systolic and diastolic blood pressure during night/sleep of 8.2% and 13.2%, respectively, and a fall in the heart rate of 12.0% were noted; these declines were significantly lesser in patients with diabetes. Age, gender, therapy, and 24-hour average blood pressures, however, had minimal relationship to the night/sleep declines in blood pressure and heart rate.

Conclusions
Twenty-four-hour blood pressure monitoring is acceptable to patients. Night/sleep declines in blood pressure are blunted in diabetics.



Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine and the Shea Medical Center, Shadyside Hospital (Drs Shapiro, Karschner, and Glunk and Mr Barnhill), and the Division of Hypertension, Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (Dr Shapiro), Pittsburgh, Pa.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Comparing the Effects of White Coat Hypertension and Sustained Hypertension on Mortality in a UK Primary Care Setting
Dawes et al.
Ann Fam Med 2008;6:390-396.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  




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