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Role of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring for the management of hypertension in Asian populations

Authors
Hoshide, SatoshiCheng, Hao-MinHuang, QifangPark, SunghaPark, Chang-GyuChen, Chen-HuanWang, Ji-GwangKario, Kazuomi
Issue Date
12월-2017
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
ABPM; Asian population; racial difference
Citation
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION, v.19, no.12, pp.1240 - 1245
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION
Volume
19
Number
12
Start Page
1240
End Page
1245
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/81282
DOI
10.1111/jch.13086
ISSN
1524-6175
Abstract
Out-of-clinic blood pressure (BP) measurement, eg, ambulatory BP monitoring, has a strong association with target organ damage and is a powerful predictor of cardiovascular events compared with clinic BP measurement. Ambulatory BP monitoring can detect masked hypertension or various BP parameters in addition to average 24-hour BP level. Short-term BP variability assessed by standard deviation or average real variability, diminished nocturnal BP fall, nocturnal hypertension, and morning BP surge assessed by ambulatory BP monitoring have all been associated with target organ damage and cardiovascular prognosis. Recently, the authors compared the degree of sleep-trough morning BP surge between a group of Japanese and a group of Western European untreated patients with hypertension and found that sleep-trough morning BP surge in Japanese persons was significantly higher than that in Europeans. Although Asian persons have been known to have a higher incidence of stroke than heart disease, the difference in characteristics of BP indices assessed by ambulatory BP monitoring might be the cause of racial differences in stroke incidence between Asian and Western populations. This review focuses on Asian characteristics for the management of hypertension using ambulatory BP monitoring.
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