Circadian Pattern of Ambulatory Blood Pressure in Hypertensive Patients With and Without Type 2 Diabetes

被引:103
作者
Ayala, Diana E. [1 ]
Moya, Ana [1 ]
Crespo, Juan J. [2 ]
Castineira, Carmen [3 ]
Dominguez-Sardina, Manuel [4 ]
Gomara, Sonia [5 ]
Sineiro, Elvira [6 ]
Mojon, Artemio [1 ]
Fontao, Maria J. [1 ]
Hermida, Ramon C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Vigo, Bioengn & Chronobiol Labs, Vigo 36310, Spain
[2] Serv Galego Saud SERGAS, Ctr Salud Bembr, Gerencia Atenc Primaria Vigo, Vigo, Spain
[3] Serv Galego Saud SERGAS, Gerencia Atenc Primaria Lugo, Ctr Salud Fingoi, Lugo, Spain
[4] Serv Galego Saud SERGAS, Gerencia Atenc Primaria Vigo, Ctr Salud Sardoma, Vigo, Spain
[5] Serv Galego Saud SERGAS, Ctr Salud Vilanova Arousa, Vilanova De Arousa, Spain
[6] Serv Galego Saud SERGAS, Ctr Salud San Roque, Vilagarcia De Arousa, Spain
关键词
Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; Circadian rhythm; Hypertension; Pulse pressure; Type; 2; diabetes; TREATMENT-TIME REGIMEN; URINARY ALBUMIN EXCRETION; ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY; CARDIOVASCULAR RISK; PULSE PRESSURE; CLINICAL CHARACTERISTICS; PROGNOSTIC VALUE; THERAPEUTIC TARGET; OF-DAY; CHRONOTHERAPY;
D O I
10.3109/07420528.2012.701489
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
There is strong association between diabetes and increased risk of end-organ damage, stroke, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality. Non-dipping (<10% decline in the asleep relative to awake blood pressure [BP] mean), as determined by ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), is frequent in diabetes and consistently associated with increased CVD risk. The reported prevalence of non-dipping in diabetes is highly variable, probably due to differences in the study groups (normotensive subjects, untreated hypertensives, treated hypertensives), relatively small sample sizes, reliance only on a single, low-reproducibility, 24-h ABPM evaluation per participant, and definition of daytime and nighttime periods by arbitrary selected fixed clock-hour spans. Accordingly, we evaluated the influence of diabetes on the circadian BP pattern by 48-h ABPM (rather than for 24 h to increase reproducibility of results) during which participants maintained a diary listing times of going to bed at night and awakening in the morning. This cross-sectional study involved 12 765 hypertensive patients (6797 men/5968 women), 58.1 +/- 14.1 (mean +/- SD) yrs of age, enrolled in the Hygia Project, designed to evaluate prospectively CVD risk by ABPM in primary care centers of northwest Spain. Among the participants, 2954 (1799 men/1155 women) had type 2 diabetes. At the time of study, 525/3314 patients with/without diabetes were untreated for hypertension, and the remaining 2429/6497 patients with/without diabetes were treated. Hypertension was defined as awake systolic (SBP)/diastolic (DBP) BP mean >= 135/85 mm Hg, or asleep SBP/DBP mean >= 120/70 mm Hg, or BP-lowering treatment. Hypertensive patients with than without diabetes were more likely to be men and of older age, have diagnoses of microalbuminuria, proteinuria, chronic kidney disease, obstructive sleep apnea, metabolic syndrome, and/or obesity, plus higher glucose, creatinine, uric acid, and triglycerides, but lower cholesterol and estimated glomerular filtration rate. In patients with diabetes, ambulatory SBP was significantly elevated (p<.001), mainly during the hours of nighttime sleep and initial hours after morning awakening, independent of presence/absence of BP-lowering treatment. Ambulatory DBP, however, was significantly higher (p<.001) in patients without diabetes, mainly during the daytime. Differing trends for SBP and DBP between groups resulted in large differences in ambulatory pulse pressure (PP), it being significantly greater (p<.001) throughout the entire 24 h in patients with diabetes, even after correcting for age. Prevalence of non-dipping was significantly higher in patients with than without diabetes (62.1% vs. 45.9%; p<.001). Largest difference between groups was in the prevalence of the riser BP pattern, i.e., asleep SBP mean greater than awake SBP mean (19.9% vs. 8.1% in patients with and without diabetes, respectively; p<.001). Elevated asleep SBP mean was the major basis for the diagnosis of hypertension and/or inadequate BP control among patients with diabetes; thus, among the uncontrolled hypertensive patients with diabetes, 89.2% had nocturnal hypertension. Our findings document significantly elevated prevalence of a blunted nocturnal BP decline in hypertensive patients with diabetes. Most important, prevalence of the riser BP pattern, associated with highest CVD risk among all possible BP patterns, was more than twice as prevalent in diabetes. Patients with diabetes also presented significantly elevated ambulatory PP, reflecting increased arterial stiffness and enhanced CVD risk. These collective findings indicate that diabetes should be included among the clinical conditions for which ABPM is recommended for proper CVD risk assessment. (Author correspondence: rhermida@uvigo.es)
引用
收藏
页码:99 / 115
页数:17
相关论文
共 93 条
[1]   Is HOMA index a predictor of nocturnal nondipping in hypertensives with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes mellitus? [J].
Afsar, Baris ;
Sezer, Siren ;
Elsurer, Rengin ;
Ozdemir, Fatma Nurhan .
BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING, 2007, 12 (03) :133-139
[2]  
American Diabetes Association, 2007, Diabetes Care, V30 Suppl 1, pS42
[3]   Reference values for clinic pulse pressure in a nonselected population [J].
Asmar, R ;
Vol, S ;
Brisac, AM ;
Tichet, J ;
Topouchian, J .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2001, 14 (05) :415-418
[4]   Predictors of mortality in patients with type 2 diabetes with or without diabetic nephropathy: a follow-up study [J].
Astrup, Anne Sofie ;
Nielsen, Flemming S. ;
Rossing, Peter ;
Ali, Samir ;
Kastrup, Jens ;
Smidt, Ulla Meng ;
Parving, Hans-Henrik .
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2007, 25 (12) :2479-2485
[5]   Cardiovascular Risk of Resistant Hypertension: Dependence on Treatment-Time Regimen of Blood Pressure-Lowering Medications [J].
Ayala, Diana E. ;
Hermida, Ramon C. ;
Mojon, Artemio ;
Fernandez, Jose R. .
CHRONOBIOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2013, 30 (1-2) :340-352
[6]   Night-time and diastolic hypertension are common and underestimated conditions in newly diagnosed apnoeic patients [J].
Baguet, JP ;
Hammer, L ;
Lévy, P ;
Pierre, H ;
Rossini, E ;
Mouret, S ;
Ormezzano, O ;
Mallion, JM ;
Pépin, JL .
JOURNAL OF HYPERTENSION, 2005, 23 (03) :521-527
[7]   Predictors of all-cause mortality in clinical ambulatory monitoring - Unique aspects of blood pressure during sleep [J].
Ben-Dov, Iddo Z. ;
Kark, Jeremy D. ;
Ben-Ishay, Drori ;
Mekler, Judith ;
Ben-Arie, Liora ;
Bursztyn, Michael .
HYPERTENSION, 2007, 49 (06) :1235-1241
[8]   Pulse pressure -: A predictor of long-term cardiovascular mortality in a French male population [J].
Benetos, A ;
Safar, M ;
Rudnichi, A ;
Smulyan, H ;
Richard, JL ;
Ducimetière, P ;
Guize, L .
HYPERTENSION, 1997, 30 (06) :1410-1415
[9]   Pulse pressure not mean pressure determines cardiovascular risk in older hypertensive patients [J].
Blacher, J ;
Staessen, JA ;
Girerd, X ;
Gasowski, J ;
Thijs, L ;
Liu, LS ;
Wang, JG ;
Fagard, RH ;
Safar, ME .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2000, 160 (08) :1085-1089
[10]   Prognostic accuracy of day versus night ambulatory blood pressure:: a cohort study [J].
Boggia, Jose ;
Li, Yan ;
Thijs, Lutgarde ;
Hansen, Tine W. ;
Kikuya, Masahiro ;
Bjorklund-Bodegard, Kristina ;
Richart, Tom ;
Ohkuba, Tkayashi ;
Kuznetsova, Tatiana ;
Torp-Pedersen, Christian ;
Lind, Lars ;
Ibsen, Hans ;
Imaiji, Yutaka ;
Wang, Jiguang ;
Sandoya, Edgardp ;
O'Brien, Eoin ;
Staessen, Jan A. .
LANCET, 2007, 370 (9594) :1219-1229