Authors
Kazuomi Kario, Thomas G Pickering, Takefumi Matsuo, Satoshi Hoshide, Joseph E Schwartz, Kazuyuki Shimada
Publication date
2001/10/1
Journal
Hypertension
Volume
38
Issue
4
Pages
852-857
Publisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Description
It remains uncertain whether abnormal dipping patterns of nocturnal blood pressure influence the prognosis for stroke. We studied stroke events in 575 older Japanese patients with sustained hypertension determined by ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (without medication). They were subclassified by their nocturnal systolic blood pressure fall (97 extreme-dippers, with ≥20% nocturnal systolic blood pressure fall; 230 dippers, with ≥10% but <20% fall; 185 nondippers, with ≥0% but <10% fall; and 63 reverse-dippers, with <0% fall) and were followed prospectively for an average duration of 41 months. Baseline brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) disclosed that the percentages with multiple silent cerebral infarct were 53% in extreme-dippers, 29% in dippers, 41% in nondippers, and 49% in reverse-dippers. There was a J-shaped relationship between dipping status and stroke incidence (extreme …
Total citations
200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320241631384145526253535044724965634634464441382718
Scholar articles