Prolonged standing (7-9 min) in elderly hospitalized patients caused a significantly greater orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure than early standing (1-3 min) (difference 4.9 mmHg; P<0.001).
Observational (n=85)
Mean Difference: 4.9 (95% CI 3–6.7)
Absolute Event Rate: -7.5% vs -2.6%
p-value: p=<0.001
To determine early and delayed orthostatic BP responses in elderly hospitalized patients on prolonged standing, 85 patients, including normotensive and hypertensive persons, both treated and untreated, aged between 60 and 90 years, were studied. Following 10 min rest a series of nine supine BP measurements were undertaken, first with a mercury sphygmomanometer, immediately followed by an automatic oscillometric BP monitor (SpaceLabs 90207), then again by the sphygmomanometer. Patients then stood and the series of BP measurements was repeated, giving a total of nine standing BP determinations at 1 min intervals. Orthostatic BP measurements recorded by both devices were assessed at 1-3 min (early phase), 4-6 min (mid-phase), and 7-9 min (late phase). The orthostatic fall in SBP was greater during the late than early phase when measured by both the sphygmomanometer (-7.5+/-14.9 vs -2.6+/-10.3 mmHg; difference 4.9+/-8.7 mmHg, p or =20 mmHg on standing) measured by the sphygmomanometer during the late than early phase (19 22% vs 6 7%; respectively, p=0.009), but not when measured by the monitor (10 12% vs 9 11%, respectively). Many hospitalized elderly patients may exhibit systolic orthostatic hypotension as measured by sphygmomanometry only after prolonged (> or =7 min) standing.
Fotherby et al. (Wed,) conducted a observational in Orthostatic hypotension (n=85). Prolonged standing (late phase, 7-9 min) vs. Early standing (1-3 min) was evaluated on Orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure measured by sphygmomanometer (MD 4.9 mmHg, 95% CI 3.0, 6.7, p=<0.001). Prolonged standing (7-9 min) in elderly hospitalized patients caused a significantly greater orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure than early standing (1-3 min) (difference 4.9 mmHg; P<0.001).
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