Systolic blood pressure from home measurements showed the strongest association with total and ischemic stroke (P<0.01), whereas pulse pressure was weakly associated.
Cohort (n=2,369)
Which home blood pressure indices are most strongly associated with stroke risk in adults without a history of stroke?
Systolic blood pressure obtained from home measurements shows the strongest association with stroke risk compared to other blood pressure indices.
p-value: p=<0.01
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The purpose of this prospective cohort study was to investigate associations between stroke and blood pressure (BP) indices (systolic BP SBP, diastolic BP DBP, mean BP, and pulse pressure PP) determined by home BP measurement. METHODS: Associations between stroke and BP indices were examined in a rural Japanese population. Home BP data of 2369 subjects (40% men) > or =35 years of age (mean, 59 years) without a history of stroke were obtained. Associations between stroke and each index were determined using Cox proportional hazards regression and the likelihood ratio (LR) test. RESULTS: During follow-up (mean, 11.7 years), 238 strokes occurred. The LR test showed that SBP and mean BP were significantly more strongly associated with total and ischemic stroke than DBP and PP (LR chi2 > or =9.3, P or =0.05 for DBP/PP). SBP tended to be more strongly associated with total/ischemic stroke than mean BP (LR chi2=3.8, P=0.05 for SBP, LR chi2 0.6 for mean BP). PP tended to be slightly more strongly associated with ischemic stroke than DBP (LR chi2=7.5, P<0.01 for DBP, LR chi(2)=9.3, P<0.01 for PP), whereas DBP was significantly more strongly associated with hemorrhagic stroke than PP (LR chi2=9.2, P<0.01 for DBP, LR chi2=2.5, P=0.01 for PP). CONCLUSIONS: PP obtained from home BP measurements was weakly associated with stroke, whereas SBP showed the strongest association. Additionally, DBP and PP may be associated with different stroke types.
Inoue et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Stroke (n=2,369). Home blood pressure indices (SBP, DBP, mean BP, PP) was evaluated on Stroke (p=<0.01). Systolic blood pressure from home measurements showed the strongest association with total and ischemic stroke (P<0.01), whereas pulse pressure was weakly associated.
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