Prognostic Significance of Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Variabilities

Author:

Kikuya Masahiro1,Hozawa Atsushi1,Ohokubo Takayoshi1,Tsuji Ichiro1,Michimata Mari1,Matsubara Mitsunobu1,Ota Masahiro1,Nagai Kenichi1,Araki Tsutomu1,Satoh Hiroshi1,Ito Sadayoshi1,Hisamichi Shigeru1,Imai Yutaka1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (M.K., M.M., M.M., M.O., T.A., Y.I.), the Nephrology, Hypertension, and Endocrinology (S.I.), Public Health (A.H., T.O., I.T., S.H.), Environmental Health Science (H.S.), Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine and Pharmaceutical Science, Sendai; and Ohasama Hospital (K.N.), Iwate, Japan.

Abstract

Abstract —To investigate the association between cardiovascular mortality and short-term variabilities in blood pressure and heart rate, we performed a long-term prospective study of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in Ohasama, Japan, starting in 1987. We obtained ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate in 1542 subjects ≥40 years of age. Blood pressure and heart rate variabilities were estimated as a standard deviation measured every 30 minutes by ambulatory monitoring. There were 67 cardiovascular deaths during the follow-up period (mean=8.5 years). The Cox proportional hazards model, adjusted for possible confounding factors, demonstrated a significant increase in cardiovascular mortality, with an increase in daytime systolic ambulatory blood pressure variability. A similar trend was observed in daytime diastolic and nighttime ambulatory blood pressures. Cardiovascular mortality rate increased linearly, with a decrease in daytime heart rate variability. Subjects in whom the daytime systolic ambulatory blood pressure variability was larger than third quintile and the daytime heart rate variability was lower than the mean−SD were at extremely high risk of cardiovascular mortality. The blood pressure and heart rate variabilities obtained every 30 minutes by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring were independent predictors for cardiovascular mortality in the general population.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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