Diurnal blood pressure variability in essential hypertension and vascular reactivity to isometric stress.

1995 
The present study was designed to assess the hemodynamic conditions, by means of impedance cardiography methods, and the relation existing between vascular reactivity to isometric stress (isometric handgrip test) and the day/night blood pressure variations, estimated by ABPM. Fifty unselected untreated non-obese EEH adult subiects (WHO class I) with a duration of disease not exceeding 3 years were classified as dippers or non-dippers according to commonly accepted criteria. Twenty three normotensive volunteers acted as controls. SBP, DBP, HR, CI and SVRI were assessed at rest and after IHG test. At rest dippers, non-dippers and controls showed comparable CI. SVRI were more enhanced in EEH than in controls and, although not significantly, in non-dippers than in dippers. During IHG all subjects showed a significant rise of SBP, DBP and HR; CI variations were of comparable size in all groups while SVRI increases were not. Non-dippers showed a significant SVRI rise after IHG in comparison with resting values. In dippers and in controls SVRI increment was insignificantly different in comparison with resting values. Non-dippers showed a closest correlation between BP and SVRI rise during IHG while dippers showed a less consistent association. In conclusion, our data suggest that in adults with short duration EEH the existence of non-dipper condition may be unrelated to myocardial hypertrophy. Blunted nocturnal BP fall is associated with vascular hyper-reactivity revealed by a bigger elevation of SVRI during IHG. These data suggest that EEH individuals may have a different proneness to become non-dippers and that vascular reactivity to stress may have a pathophysiological role in the natural history of EEH
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    7
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []