Ambulatory blood pressure

Jump to navigation Jump to search

WikiDoc Resources for Ambulatory blood pressure

Articles

Most recent articles on Ambulatory blood pressure

Most cited articles on Ambulatory blood pressure

Review articles on Ambulatory blood pressure

Articles on Ambulatory blood pressure in N Eng J Med, Lancet, BMJ

Media

Powerpoint slides on Ambulatory blood pressure

Images of Ambulatory blood pressure

Photos of Ambulatory blood pressure

Podcasts & MP3s on Ambulatory blood pressure

Videos on Ambulatory blood pressure

Evidence Based Medicine

Cochrane Collaboration on Ambulatory blood pressure

Bandolier on Ambulatory blood pressure

TRIP on Ambulatory blood pressure

Clinical Trials

Ongoing Trials on Ambulatory blood pressure at Clinical Trials.gov

Trial results on Ambulatory blood pressure

Clinical Trials on Ambulatory blood pressure at Google

Guidelines / Policies / Govt

US National Guidelines Clearinghouse on Ambulatory blood pressure

NICE Guidance on Ambulatory blood pressure

NHS PRODIGY Guidance

FDA on Ambulatory blood pressure

CDC on Ambulatory blood pressure

Books

Books on Ambulatory blood pressure

News

Ambulatory blood pressure in the news

Be alerted to news on Ambulatory blood pressure

News trends on Ambulatory blood pressure

Commentary

Blogs on Ambulatory blood pressure

Definitions

Definitions of Ambulatory blood pressure

Patient Resources / Community

Patient resources on Ambulatory blood pressure

Discussion groups on Ambulatory blood pressure

Patient Handouts on Ambulatory blood pressure

Directions to Hospitals Treating Ambulatory blood pressure

Risk calculators and risk factors for Ambulatory blood pressure

Healthcare Provider Resources

Symptoms of Ambulatory blood pressure

Causes & Risk Factors for Ambulatory blood pressure

Diagnostic studies for Ambulatory blood pressure

Treatment of Ambulatory blood pressure

Continuing Medical Education (CME)

CME Programs on Ambulatory blood pressure

International

Ambulatory blood pressure en Espanol

Ambulatory blood pressure en Francais

Business

Ambulatory blood pressure in the Marketplace

Patents on Ambulatory blood pressure

Experimental / Informatics

List of terms related to Ambulatory blood pressure

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]


Overview

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) measures blood pressure at regular intervals throughout the day and night. It is believed to be able to reduce the white coat hypertension effect.

Studies are listed below supporting the thesis that ABPM is a far better method than clinical measurements.

Nocturnal hypertension

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring allows blood pressure to be continually monitored during sleep, and is useful to determine whether the patient is a dipper or non-dipper, that is to say whether or not blood pressure falls at night compared to daytime values. A night time fall is normal. Absence of a night time dip is associated with poorer health outcomes. In addition, nocturnal hypertension is associated with end organ damage[1] and is a much better indicator than the daytime blood pressure reading.

Target organ damage

Template:Seealso It has been shown that end-organ damages related to hypertension, such as left ventricular hypertrophy, narrowing of the retinal arteries are more strongly associated with ABPM than with a clinical BP measurement, the reason being clinical BP measurement are referred to the marked variability of BP measurement and white coat effect [2].

Morning surge

The day-night time fluctuates with values rising in the daytime and falling after midnight. With these changes, its possible to calculate the BP dip, with categories such as non-dipper (<10%), dipper, extreme dipper, and reverse dipper. Independent studies have shown that for subject with blunted or abolished fall dip and abnormal ABP result in higher incidences of LV hypertrophy and CV mortality [3]. According to the American Heart Association, an excessive morning blood pressure surge is a predictor of stroke in elderly people with high blood pressure [4] [5].

This is based on the American Heart Association's calculation, using systolic blood pressure (SBP):

<math>Dip = 1 - \frac{sleep SBP}{Awake SB} *100% </math>


Range Class
<0% Reverse Dipper
0% - 10% Non-Dipper
10% - 20% Dipper
>20% Extreme Dipper

Blood pressure variability

24-hour, non-invasive ambulatory blood pressure monitoring allows estimates of BP variability.

References

External links


Template:WikiDoc Sources