“White Coat” Versus “Sustained” Borderline Hypertension in Tecumseh, Michigan

During a survey of young subjects not receiving treatment for hypertension in Tecumseh, Michigan, clinic and self-monitored blood pressures taken at home (14 readings in 7 days) were obtained in 737 subjects (387 men, 350 women, average age 31.5 years). Hypertension in the clinic was diagnosed if th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979) Tex. 1979), 1990-12, Vol.16 (6), p.617-623
Hauptverfasser: Julius, Stevo, Mejia, Agnes, Jones, Kerin, Krause, Lisa, Schork, Nicholas, van de Ven, Cosmas, Johnson, Ernest, Petrin, Jurij, Sekkarie, M Abed, Kjeldsen, Sverre Erik, Schmouder, Robert, Gupta, Rakesh, Ferraro, James, Nazzaro, Pietro, Weissfeld, Joel
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container_end_page 623
container_issue 6
container_start_page 617
container_title Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. 1979)
container_volume 16
creator Julius, Stevo
Mejia, Agnes
Jones, Kerin
Krause, Lisa
Schork, Nicholas
van de Ven, Cosmas
Johnson, Ernest
Petrin, Jurij
Sekkarie, M Abed
Kjeldsen, Sverre Erik
Schmouder, Robert
Gupta, Rakesh
Ferraro, James
Nazzaro, Pietro
Weissfeld, Joel
description During a survey of young subjects not receiving treatment for hypertension in Tecumseh, Michigan, clinic and self-monitored blood pressures taken at home (14 readings in 7 days) were obtained in 737 subjects (387 men, 350 women, average age 31.5 years). Hypertension in the clinic was diagnosed if the clinic blood pressure exceeded 140 mm Hg systolic or 90 mm Hg diastolic. In the absence of firm criteria for what constitutes hypertension at home, subjects whose average home blood pressure was in the upper decile of the whole population were considered to have hypertension at home. By these criteria, 7.1% of the whole population had “white coat” hypertension (i.e., high clinic but not elevated home readings). The prevalence of “sustained” hypertension (i.e., high readings in the clinic and at home) was 5.1%. Subjects with white coat and sustained borderline hypertension in Tecumseh were very similar. Both groups showed, at previous examinations (at ages 5, 8, 21, and 23 years), significantly higher blood pressure readings than the normotensive subjects. As young adults (average age 333 years), the parents of both hypertensive groups had significantly higher blood pressure readings than the parents of normotensive subjects. Both hypertensive groups had faster heart rates, higher systemic vascular resistance, and higher minimal forearm vascular resistance. Both hypertensive groups were more overweight, had higher plasma triglycerides, insulin, and insulin/glucose ratios than normotensive subjects. The white coat hypertensive group also had lower values of high density lipoprotein than the normotensive group. White coat hypertension is a frequent condition. In regards to excessive risk of hypertension (past blood pressures, parental blood pressures, weight, and heart rate), excessive risk for atherosclerosis (triglycerides and insulin), and hemodynamic parameters (vascular resistance and minimal forearm resistance), the white coat and sustained hypertensive groups are similarly different from the normotensive group. These findings do not support the accepted practice of using home blood pressure determination to distinguish groups of borderline hypertensive subjects with a lesser or greater clinical problem.
doi_str_mv 10.1161/01.hyp.16.6.617
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Hypertension in the clinic was diagnosed if the clinic blood pressure exceeded 140 mm Hg systolic or 90 mm Hg diastolic. In the absence of firm criteria for what constitutes hypertension at home, subjects whose average home blood pressure was in the upper decile of the whole population were considered to have hypertension at home. By these criteria, 7.1% of the whole population had “white coat” hypertension (i.e., high clinic but not elevated home readings). The prevalence of “sustained” hypertension (i.e., high readings in the clinic and at home) was 5.1%. Subjects with white coat and sustained borderline hypertension in Tecumseh were very similar. Both groups showed, at previous examinations (at ages 5, 8, 21, and 23 years), significantly higher blood pressure readings than the normotensive subjects. As young adults (average age 333 years), the parents of both hypertensive groups had significantly higher blood pressure readings than the parents of normotensive subjects. Both hypertensive groups had faster heart rates, higher systemic vascular resistance, and higher minimal forearm vascular resistance. Both hypertensive groups were more overweight, had higher plasma triglycerides, insulin, and insulin/glucose ratios than normotensive subjects. The white coat hypertensive group also had lower values of high density lipoprotein than the normotensive group. White coat hypertension is a frequent condition. In regards to excessive risk of hypertension (past blood pressures, parental blood pressures, weight, and heart rate), excessive risk for atherosclerosis (triglycerides and insulin), and hemodynamic parameters (vascular resistance and minimal forearm resistance), the white coat and sustained hypertensive groups are similarly different from the normotensive group. These findings do not support the accepted practice of using home blood pressure determination to distinguish groups of borderline hypertensive subjects with a lesser or greater clinical problem.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>American Heart Association, Inc</pub><pmid>2246029</pmid><doi>10.1161/01.hyp.16.6.617</doi><tpages>7</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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source MEDLINE; American Heart Association Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Adult
Aging - physiology
Ambulatory Care
Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure Determination - methods
Cardiovascular Diseases - etiology
Female
Hemodynamics
Humans
Hypertension - complications
Hypertension - physiopathology
Male
Parents
Risk Factors
Self Care
title “White Coat” Versus “Sustained” Borderline Hypertension in Tecumseh, Michigan
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