Male gender, excessive alcohol use, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea, and antihypertensive medication were independent determinants of elevated morning compared with evening home blood pressure.
Cross-Sectional (n=1,919)
What are the determinants of differences between morning and evening home blood pressure in the general adult population?
Male gender, excessive alcohol use, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea, and antihypertensive medication use independently predict elevated morning compared to evening home blood pressure.
Absolute Event Rate: 137.7% vs 141.5%
p-value: p=<0.001
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the determinants of home morning and evening blood pressure (BP) differences in general population. METHODS: We studied a representative sample of the general Finnish adult population with 1919 study subjects, aged 41-74 years. Study subjects underwent a clinical interview, clinical examination and home BP measurement (28 measurements performed twice in the morning and in the evening during 7 consecutive days). RESULTS: In untreated hypertensive subjects, systolic home BP was lower in the morning than in the evening while no difference was detected for diastolic home BP (137.7/85.1 vs 141.5/85.2 mmHg, p < 0.001/0.64). In treated hypertensive subjects, the difference between systolic morning and evening BP was smaller (136.2 vs 137.1 mmHg, p = 0.023) and diastolic morning BP was even higher than evening BP (83.3 vs 82.1 mmHg, p < 0.001). In the univariate analysis, higher home BP and higher body mass index were associated with relatively higher morning BP compared with evening BP. In addition, men, excessive alcohol users, subjects with cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea and subjects using antihypertensive medication had relatively higher morning BP compared with evening BP. In the multivariate analysis, male gender, excessive alcohol consumption, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea and use of antihypertensive medication were independent determinants of elevated morning BP compared with evening BP. CONCLUSION: Knowledge of the underlying causes affecting morning and evening home BP difference in patients facilitates physicians to make rational antihypertensive medication and lifestyle adjustments, such as examining probable sleep disorder, and give alcohol and cardiovascular disease prevention counseling.
Johansson et al. (Mon,) conducted a cross-sectional in General population / Hypertension (n=1,919). Clinical determinants (e.g., male gender, alcohol use, sleep apnea) vs. Subjects without these risk factors was evaluated on Systolic home blood pressure in untreated hypertensive subjects (morning vs evening) (p=<0.001). Male gender, excessive alcohol use, cardiovascular disease, sleep apnea, and antihypertensive medication were independent determinants of elevated morning compared with evening home blood pressure.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: