15
LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1 , B. Fišer 1 , J. Siegelová 1 , P. Vank 1 , G. Cornelissen 2 , F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg Chronobiology Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING

J. Dušek1, B. Fišer1, J. Siegelová1, P. Vank1, G. Cornelissen2, F. Halberg2

1Masaryk University, Brno2Halberg Chronobiology Center, University

of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

Page 2: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

AIM OF THE STUDY

is comparison between casual blood pressure measurements and 7-day blood pressure monitoring.

Page 3: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

METHODS

Ninety- one subjects without antihypertensive therapy (age between 20 and 80 years) were recruited for 7-day ambulatory BP monitoring (Collins Japan).

Page 4: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

METHODS

The obtained data were fitted with sinusoid curve (wave length 24 hours) by the least square method and mean value, so called MESOR (M) was determined.

Page 5: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg
Page 6: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

METHODS The data of M of systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure were compared with the values of one measurement at 10 a.m. (representative of casual blood pressure measurement). Further we compared M with mean values of 7 days 10 a.m. measurements.

Page 7: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg
Page 8: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

RESULTS

Page 9: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

SBP

y = 1,0305x - 1,219R2 = 0,3687

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160

MESOR (mmHg)

ON

E B

LOO

D P

RE

SS

UR

E

ME

AS

UR

EM

EN

T (m

mH

g)

Page 10: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

DBP

y = 1,0838x - 2,9439

R2 = 0,4838

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

MESOR (mmHg)

ON

E M

EA

SU

RE

MN

T (m

mH

g)

Page 11: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

The comparison of M with one 10 a.m. value of the 4 day of the monitoring revealed correlation (SBP: r=0.61, DBP: r=0.70) but the difference between measured values and expected values was in 70 % subjects higher than 6 mmHg of SBP. The corresponding proportion of subjects for DBP was 49 %. This indicates the low reliability of one measurement.

Page 12: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

SBP

y = 0,9747x + 9,0004R2 = 0,7123

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160

MESOR (mmHg)

ME

AN

OF

7 M

EA

SU

RE

ME

NTS

(m

mH

g)

Page 13: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

DBP

y = 1,0472x + 0,747

R2 = 0,7148

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 20 40 60 80 100 120

MESOR (mmHg)

ME

AN

OF

7 M

EA

SU

RE

ME

NTS

(m

mH

g)

Page 14: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

Using the 7 days mean 10 a.m. values the reliability increased (SBP: r=0.84, DBP: r=0.85) but despite the high correlation the difference higher than 6 mmHg was found in 32 % subjects (SBP), respective in 19 % (DBP).

Page 15: LONG TERM BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORING J. Dušek 1, B. Fišer 1, J. Siegelová 1, P. Vank 1, G. Cornelissen 2, F. Halberg 2 1 Masaryk University, Brno 2 Halberg

CONCLUSION

Our results clearly indicate the advantage of the long term blood pressure monitoring over casual blood pressure measurement for the blood pressure evaluation.

Support: MSM0021622402