Effect of Dietary Patterns on Ambulatory Blood Pressure

Author:

Moore Thomas J.1,Vollmer William M.1,Appel Lawrence J.1,Sacks Frank M.1,Svetkey Laura P.1,Vogt Thomas M.1,Conlin Paul R.1,Simons-Morton Denise G.1,Carter-Edwards Lori1,Harsha David W.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (T.J.M., F.M.S., P.R.C.), Boston, Mass; Merck and Company (T.J.M.), Westwood, Mass; Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research, Johns Hopkins University (L.J.A.), Baltimore, Md; Duke University Medical Center, Duke Hypertension Center (L.P.S.), Durham, NC; Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health (F.M.S.), Boston, Mass; Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research (T.M.V., W.M.V.), Portland, Ore;...

Abstract

Abstract —We measured ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) in 354 participants in the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) Trial to determine the effect of dietary treatment on ABP (24-hour, day and night) and to assess participants’ acceptance of and compliance with the ABP monitoring (ABPM) technique. After a 3-week run-in period on a control “typical” American diet, subjects (diastolic blood pressure [BP], 80 to 95 mm Hg; systolic BP, <160 mm Hg; mean age, 45 years) were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 diets for an 8-week intervention period: a continuation of the control diet; a diet rich in fruits and vegetables; and a “combination” diet that emphasized fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy products. We measured ABP at the end of the run-in and intervention periods. Both the fruit/vegetable and combination diets lowered 24-hour ABP significantly compared with the control diet ( P <0. 0001 for systolic and diastolic pressures on both diets: control diet, −0.2/+0.1 mm Hg; fruit/vegetable diet, −3.2/−1.9 mm Hg; combination diet, −4.6/−2.6 mm Hg). The combination diet lowered pressure during both day and night. Hypertensive subjects had a significantly greater response than normotensives to the combination diet (24-hour ABP, −10.1/−5.5 versus −2.3/−1.6 mm Hg, respectively). After correction for the control diet responses, the magnitude of BP lowering was not significantly different whether measured by ABPM or random-zero sphygmomanometry. Participant acceptance of ABPM was excellent: only 1 participant refused to wear the ABP monitor, and 7 subjects (2%) provided incomplete recordings. These results demonstrate that the DASH combination diet provides significant round-the-clock reduction in BP, especially in hypertensive participants.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Internal Medicine

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