TY - JOUR
T1 - Age-specific characteristics of nocturnal blood pressure in a general population in a community of northern japan
AU - Imai, Yutaka
AU - Munakata, Masanori
AU - Hashimoto, Junichiro
AU - Minami, Naoyoshi
AU - Sakuma, Hiromichi
AU - Watanabe, Noriko
AU - Yabe, Tamami
AU - Nishiyama, Akimitsu
AU - Sakuma, Mariko
AU - Yamagishi, Toshio
AU - Abe, Keishi
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by research grants from the Miyagi Prefectural Kidney Association, the Gonryo Medical Foundation, the Mitsui Life Social Welfare Foundation and by a Grant for Intractable Disease (No. 3C-5) and Cardiovascular Disease (No. 63C-6) from the Ministry of Health and Welfare of Japan.
PY - 1993/6
Y1 - 1993/6
N2 - The age- and gender-specific profile of circadian blood pressure variation was examined by monitoring ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) in 477 untreated subjects in a rural community of northern Japan. Autoregressive spectral analysis demonstrated three major peaks at around 24,12, and 8 h. We fitted a truncated Fourier series with three harmonics to the blood pressure (BP) data using least squares regression. More than half of the BP and pulse rate periodic curves were bimodal, one-third were trimodal, and the remainder were unimodal. The nadir of BP appeared between 00:00 and 01:30, and that of pulse rate occurred between 00:30 and 02:00. The nadir of systolic and diastolic BP, as well as pulse rate, appeared earlier with increasing age, and the difference between subjects in their 20s and those in their 70s was about 1 h. The amplitude of 24 h BP decreased with increasing age in men, but not in women. This type of information on the circadian BP profile of a general population is useful for the diagnosis and treatment of hypertension. Am J Hypertens 1993;6:179S-183S.
AB - The age- and gender-specific profile of circadian blood pressure variation was examined by monitoring ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) in 477 untreated subjects in a rural community of northern Japan. Autoregressive spectral analysis demonstrated three major peaks at around 24,12, and 8 h. We fitted a truncated Fourier series with three harmonics to the blood pressure (BP) data using least squares regression. More than half of the BP and pulse rate periodic curves were bimodal, one-third were trimodal, and the remainder were unimodal. The nadir of BP appeared between 00:00 and 01:30, and that of pulse rate occurred between 00:30 and 02:00. The nadir of systolic and diastolic BP, as well as pulse rate, appeared earlier with increasing age, and the difference between subjects in their 20s and those in their 70s was about 1 h. The amplitude of 24 h BP decreased with increasing age in men, but not in women. This type of information on the circadian BP profile of a general population is useful for the diagnosis and treatment of hypertension. Am J Hypertens 1993;6:179S-183S.
KW - Ambulatory blood pressure
KW - Amplitude
KW - Circadian blood pressure variation
KW - Nocturnal blood pressure
KW - Phase
KW - Population study
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U2 - 10.1093/ajh/6.6.179S
DO - 10.1093/ajh/6.6.179S
M3 - Article
C2 - 8347314
AN - SCOPUS:17044449378
SN - 0895-7061
VL - 6
SP - 179s-183s
JO - American Journal of Hypertension
JF - American Journal of Hypertension
IS - 6
ER -