Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in dialysis patients and estimation of mean interdialytic blood pressure.

1997 
Abstract To define blood pressure (BP) patterns and control in dialysis patients, 48-hour ambulatory BP monitoring was performed in 36 hemodialysis and 18 peritoneal dialysis patients. Monitoring began during a dialysis session for hemodialysis patients. Data revealed significantly lower diastolic BP (DBP) and lower diastolic load (percentage of diastolic values > 90 mm Hg) in hemodialysis patients compared with peritoneal dialysis patients (80.6 mm Hg v 88.8 mm Hg, respectively, [ P P P r 2 = 0.72 for SBP; r 2 = 0.65 for DBP), demonstrating that prehemodialysis and posthemodialysis BP can be used to predict mean BP in hemodialysis patients. In summary, our data show the absence of a diurnal variation of BP in dialysis patients and lower BP in hemodialysis patients compared with peritoneal dialysis patients. Among hemodialysis patients, more hypotension occurred after dialysis compared with other periods, and predialysis and postdialysis BP can be used to model mean BP levels.
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