Affiliation:
1. From the Section of Hypertension and Vascular Diseases, University of Connecticut School of Medicine (Farmington).
Abstract
Abstract
—A less-than-normal decline in nocturnal blood pressure (BP) has been associated with excessive hypertensive complications. This is concerning because secondary hypertension is often associated with this so-called nondipper BP profile. A nondipping pattern is more frequently found in the presence of pheochromocytoma, Cushing’s syndrome, and sleep apnea syndrome, but the prevalence is unclear in patients with primary hyperaldosteronism. We therefore studied ambulatory BP profiles in 16 hypertensive patients with primary hyperaldosteronism and an equal number of essential hypertensive subjects. The awake−sleep BP difference of the hyperaldosteronism patients was similar to that of essential hypertensives (15/14±3/2 versus 14/9±3/2 mm Hg,
P
=NS). The prevalence of dippers and nondippers (according to two distinct criteria) in the two groups was similar. Repeat ambulatory BP monitoring in 12 subjects with primary hyperaldosteronism after specific intervention (3 after surgical removal of an adrenal adenoma and 9 after commencement and titration of spironolactone therapy) showed highly significant reductions in office BP (22/10±6/4 mm Hg,
P
<.05) and awake and sleep BP. However, the extent of nocturnal BP decline was unchanged between the two studies (17/16±3/3 versus 16/12±2/2 mm Hg,
P
=NS). There was no correlation between the awake−sleep difference and serum or urinary aldosterone levels or the aldosterone-to-renin ratio. In this study, we did not detect any differences in the awake−sleep differences between a group of hypertensives with primary hyperaldosteronism and a control group of essential hypertensives.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
20 articles.
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