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Journal of Hypertension | 2013

European Society of Hypertension Position Paper on Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring

Eoin O'Brien; Gianfranco Parati; George S. Stergiou; Roland Asmar; Laurie Beilin; Grzegorz Bilo; Denis Clement; Alejandro de la Sierra; Peter W. de Leeuw; Eamon Dolan; Robert Fagard; John Graves; Geoffrey A. Head; Yutaka Imai; Kazuomi Kario; Empar Lurbe; Jean-Michel Mallion; Giuseppe Mancia; Thomas Mengden; Martin G. Myers; Gbenga Ogedegbe; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Stefano Omboni; Paolo Palatini; Josep Redon; Luis M. Ruilope; Andrew Shennan; Jan A. Staessen; Gert vanMontfrans; Paolo Verdecchia

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is being used increasingly in both clinical practice and hypertension research. Although there are many guidelines that emphasize the indications for ABPM, there is no comprehensive guideline dealing with all aspects of the technique. It was agreed at a consensus meeting on ABPM in Milan in 2011 that the 34 attendees should prepare a comprehensive position paper on the scientific evidence for ABPM.This position paper considers the historical background, the advantages and limitations of ABPM, the threshold levels for practice, and the cost-effectiveness of the technique. It examines the need for selecting an appropriate device, the accuracy of devices, the additional information and indices that ABPM devices may provide, and the software requirements.At a practical level, the paper details the requirements for using ABPM in clinical practice, editing considerations, the number of measurements required, and the circumstances, such as obesity and arrhythmias, when particular care needs to be taken when using ABPM.The clinical indications for ABPM, among which white-coat phenomena, masked hypertension, and nocturnal hypertension appear to be prominent, are outlined in detail along with special considerations that apply in certain clinical circumstances, such as childhood, the elderly and pregnancy, and in cardiovascular illness, examples being stroke and chronic renal disease, and the place of home measurement of blood pressure in relation to ABPM is appraised.The role of ABPM in research circumstances, such as pharmacological trials and in the prediction of outcome in epidemiological studies is examined and finally the implementation of ABPM in practice is considered in relation to the issue of reimbursement in different countries, the provision of the technique by primary care practices, hospital clinics and pharmacies, and the growing role of registries of ABPM in many countries.


Journal of Hypertension | 2001

Relation between blood pressure variability and carotid artery damage in hypertension: baseline data from the European Lacidipine Study on Atherosclerosis (ELSA).

Giuseppe Mancia; Gianfranco Parati; Michael Hennig; Birgit Flatau; Stefano Omboni; Fabio Glavina; Bruno Costa; Renate Scherz; Gene Bond; Alberto Zanchetti

Background Baseline data from the European Lacidipine Study on Atherosclerosis (ELSA) have shown that carotid intima–media thickness (IMT) is not related to diastolic blood pressure (BP), but that it is related to clinic systolic (S) or pulse pressure (PP) and more so to their 24 h average values. The aim of the present study was to determine whether IMT independently relates to additional information obtained through ambulatory BP, in particular to SBP or PP variability. Methods and results In 1663 hypertensive patients, after a wash-out period from antihypertensive treatment (mean age 56.2 ± 7.65 years), IMT was assessed from 12 different carotid sites. Ambulatory BP measurements were performed every 15 min (day) and every 20 min (night). IMT values were positively related to 24 h, day and night average SBP and PP. There was some relationship of IMT with day–night or clinic–day SBP and PP differences. The most important finding, however, was that IMT values were related with 24 h SBP or PP standard deviation (P < 0.001), a measure of overall SBP or PP variability. The relationship was seen also by multiple regression analysis, the standard deviation for SBP or PP only following age and 24 h average SBP or PP in accounting for IMT values. Conclusions This is the first demonstration from a large database that not only average 24 h PP and SBP values, but also 24 h BP fluctuations, are associated with, and possibly determinants of, the alterations of large artery structure in hypertension.


Journal of Hypertension | 2014

European Society of Hypertension practice guidelines for ambulatory blood pressure monitoring

Gianfranco Parati; George S. Stergiou; Eoin O'Brien; Roland Asmar; Lawrence J. Beilin; Grzegorz Bilo; Denis Clement; Alejandro de la Sierra; Peter W. de Leeuw; Eamon Dolan; Robert Fagard; John Graves; Geoffrey A. Head; Yutaka Imai; Kazuomi Kario; Empar Lurbe; Jean Michel Mallion; Giuseppe Mancia; Thomas Mengden; Martin G. Myers; Gbenga Ogedegbe; Takayoshi Ohkubo; Stefano Omboni; Paolo Palatini; Josep Redon; Luis M. Ruilope; Andrew Shennan; Jan A. Staessen; Gert A. van Montfrans; Paolo Verdecchia

Given the increasing use of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) in both clinical practice and hypertension research, a group of scientists, participating in the European Society of Hypertension Working Group on blood pressure monitoring and cardiovascular variability, in year 2013 published a comprehensive position paper dealing with all aspects of the technique, based on the available scientific evidence for ABPM. The present work represents an updated schematic summary of the most important aspects related to the use of ABPM in daily practice, and is aimed at providing recommendations for proper use of this technique in a clinical setting by both specialists and practicing physicians. The present article details the requirements and the methodological issues to be addressed for using ABPM in clinical practice, The clinical indications for ABPM suggested by the available studies, among which white-coat phenomena, masked hypertension, and nocturnal hypertension, are outlined in detail, and the place of home measurement of blood pressure in relation to ABPM is discussed. The role of ABPM in pharmacological, epidemiological, and clinical research is also briefly mentioned. Finally, the implementation of ABPM in practice is considered in relation to the situation of different countries with regard to the reimbursement and the availability of ABPM in primary care practices, hospital clinics, and pharmacies.


Journal of Hypertension | 1992

Persistent blood pressure increase induced by heavy smoking

Antonella Groppelli; Dante Marcelo Artigas Giorgi; Stefano Omboni; Gianfranco Parati; Giuseppe Mancia

OBJECTIVE To test the hypothesis that heavy smoking is associated with a persistent increase in blood pressure. DESIGN In 10 normotensive smokers asked to smoke one cigarette every 15 min for 1 h, blood pressure and heart rate were continuously monitored during the smoking period and during the preceding non-smoking hour. In six other normotensive smokers asked to smoke two cigarettes per hour throughout the whole day, blood pressure and heart rate were monitored non-invasively in ambulatory conditions for 8 h (0900-1700 h). Blood pressure monitoring was repeated during a non-smoking day. METHODS Beat-to-beat blood pressure and heart rate were monitored at rest by means of the Finapres device. Blood pressure signal was sampled at 165 Hz by a computer to calculate hourly data. Ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate were measured once every 10 min. RESULTS In resting conditions, the first cigarette caused an immediate and marked increase in blood pressure and heart rate, and the peak blood pressure and heart rate achieved were similar for the remaining three cigarettes. In each instance, the hemodynamic effects were so prolonged that throughout the smoking hour, blood pressure and heart rate were persistently higher than during the non-smoking hour. The standard deviations of systolic and diastolic blood pressure and heart rate were also higher during the smoking hour, indicating an increase in blood pressure and heart rate variability. In the six ambulant smokers, daytime blood pressure and heart rate were also persistently higher during smoking than during non-smoking. CONCLUSIONS Heavy smoking is associated with a persistent rise in blood pressure and also with an increase in blood pressure variability. These effects (which may escape clinic blood pressure measurements performed during non-smoking) may account for some of the smoking-related cardiovascular risk.


Journal of Hypertension | 1998

Reproducibility and clinical value of nocturnal hypotension: Prospective evidence from the SAMPLE study

Stefano Omboni; Gianfranco Parati; Paolo Palatini; Alessandro Vanasia; Maria Lorenza Muiesan; Cesare Cuspidi; Giuseppe Mancia

Objective To assess whether modifications in the night-time blood pressure fall caused by antihypertensive treatment predict the regression of end-organ damage of hypertension. Methods The analysis was performed in patients with essential hypertension and echocardiographically detected left ventricular hypertrophy involved in the SAMPLE study. For each patient, ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and echocardiographic determination of left ventricular mass index were performed at the end of a 4-week wash-out pretreatment period, after 3 and 12 months of treatment with lisinopril or with lisinopril plus hydrochlorothiazide and after a final 4-week placebo period. For each ambulatory blood pressure monitoring the 24 h average, daytime average (0600–2400 h), night-time average (2400–0600 h) and day–night difference was computed. The percentages of dipper and non-dipper patients (i.e. the patients with night blood pressure falls greater and less than 10% of the daytime average, respectively) were also computed. Results The reproducibility of the day–night difference was low, both for comparison of the pretreatment and final placebo periods (n = 170) and for comparison of the third and the 12th month of treatment (n = 180). The reproducibility of the dipper–non-dipper dichotomy was also low, 35–40% of patients becoming non-dippers if they were dippers and vice versa, both with and without treatment. The changes in left ventricular mass index after 12 months of treatment were significantly (P < 0.01) related to the changes in 24 h, daytime and night-time blood pressure (r always > 0.33), but this was not the case for the treatment-induced modification of the day–night difference (r = −0.03 and −0.008 for systolic and diastolic blood pressures, respectively). Conclusions Our results show that day–night blood pressure changes and the classification of patients into dippers and non-dippers are poorly reproducible over time. It also provides the first prospective evidence that treatment-induced changes in day–night blood pressure difference are not related to treatment-induced regression of left ventricular mass index, thus having a limited clinical significance.


Journal of Hypertension | 1998

The smoothness index: A new, reproducible and clinically relevant measure of the homogeneity of the blood pressure reduction with treatment for hypertension

Gianfranco Parati; Stefano Omboni; Damiano Rizzoni; Giuseppe Mancia

Objective To introduce a new method, the smoothness index, for assessing the homogeneity of 24 h blood pressure reduction by antihypertensive treatment and to compare it with the trough: peak ratio; and to assess the ability of both indices to predict a reduction in the left ventricular mass index induced by treatment. Patients and methods In 174 patients with essential hypertension and left ventricular hypertrophy, enrolled in the Study on Ambulatory Monitoring of Pressure and Lisinopril Evaluation (SAMPLE), aged 20–65 years, we measured clinic blood pressure, 24 h ambulatory blood pressure and the left ventricular mass index (echocardiography) before and after treatment with lisinopril at 20 mg with the addition of 12.5 or 25 mg hydrochlorothiazide as needed to reach a sufficient blood pressure reduction. The following parameters were computed for systolic and diastolic ambulatory blood pressure: (1) hourly and 24 h blood pressure averages (± SD) at baseline and after 3 and 12 months of treatment; (2) hourly blood pressure changes from baseline after 3 and 12 months of treatment, and their average (± SD) over 24 h; (3) the trough: peak ratio after 3 and 12 months of treatment; and (4) the smoothness index after 3 and 12 months of treatment. Similar calculations were also performed at the end of a final study month during which active treatment was withdrawn and placebo was substituted (n = 164). Results The smoothness index for systolic and diastolic ambulatory blood pressure computed after 3 months of treatment was more closely related to its corresponding values after 12 months of treatment than the trough: peak ratio values computed after the same time periods were (r = 0.68 versus 0.38 for systolic and 0.68 versus 0.42 for diastolic blood pressure, respectively). The smoothness index showed an inverse correlation with the 24 h standard deviation of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (r = −0.25 and −0.16, P < 0.01 and < 0.05, respectively, for 12 months of treatment), while the trough: peak ratio did not (r = −0.01 to −0.12, NS). A treatment-induced reduction in the left ventricular mass index was related to the smoothness index for systolic and diastolic blood pressure (r = −0.35 and −0.32, P < 0.001 with 12 months of treatment), but not to the corresponding trough: peak ratios. Conclusions The smoothness index identifies the occurrence of a balanced 24 h blood pressure reduction with treatment and correlates with the favourable effects of treatment on left ventricular hypertrophy better than the commonly used trough: peak ratio.


Hypertension | 1993

Spectral and sequence analysis of finger blood pressure variability. Comparison with analysis of intra-arterial recordings.

Stefano Omboni; G. Parati; Alessandra Frattola; Emanuela Mutti; M. Di Rienzo; Paolo Castiglioni; G. Mancia

The aim of our study was to assess whether the Finapres device is able to accurately monitor not only average blood pressure values but also blood pressure variability. To examine this issue, we analyzed 30-minute recordings of finger and intra-arterial pressure simultaneously obtained at rest in 14 patients. We compared systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, pulse interval (the reciprocal of heart rate), overall variability (standard deviation), and specific time-domain and frequency-domain components. Systolic blood pressure, diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, and pulse interval spectral powers were computed by fast Fourier transform over three frequency bands: low frequency (0.025 to 0.07 Hz), midfrequency (0.07 to 0.14 Hz), and high frequency (0.14 to 0.35 Hz). The coherence, ie, the degree of association between blood pressure and pulse interval powers obtained by the two techniques, was also assessed. Standard deviations of diastolic blood pressure, mean arterial pressure, and pulse interval were similar when assessed from the two recordings, whereas standard deviation of systolic blood pressure was overestimated by analysis of finger pressure recordings. All powers of diastolic blood pressure and mean arterial pressure and high-frequency powers of systolic blood pressure estimated from analysis of finger blood pressure tracings were superimposable to those obtained by analyzing invasive recordings. Low-frequency and midfrequency powers of intra-arterial systolic blood pressure were significantly overestimated by the analysis of finger blood pressure tracings (+13.7 +/- 4.4 mm Hg2, P < .01, and +2.3 +/- 0.9 mm Hg2, P < .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Hypertension | 1992

Evaluation of noninvasive blood pressure monitoring devices Spacelabs 90202 and 90207 versus resting and ambulatory 24-hour intra-arterial blood pressure.

Antonella Groppelli; Stefano Omboni; Gianfranco Parati; Giuseppe Mancia

This study evaluated the accuracy of blood pressure values provided by the Spacelabs 90202 and 90207 devices in comparison with intra-arterial recording in 19 subjects at rest and in nine subjects in ambulatory conditions (Oxford method). At rest Spacelabs monitors reflected intra-arterial systolic blood pressure values very closely but overestimated to a considerable extent intra-arterial diastolic blood pressure (Spacelabs-intra-arterial differences, -0.8 +/- 9.2, NS, and 9.1 +/- 8.8 mm Hg, p less than 0.01, for systolic and diastolic blood pressures, respectively). In ambulatory conditions Spacelabs-intra-arterial average differences in 24-hour values were +0.4 +/- 5.1 mm Hg for systolic blood pressure (NS) and +14.0 +/- 2.9 mm Hg for diastolic blood pressure (p less than 0.01) when group data were considered. The performance of both Spacelabs devices was worse when assessed in individual subjects or for each hourly interval. In spite of these differences between noninvasive and intra-arterial absolute blood pressure values, however, Spacelabs 90202 and 90207 monitors were able to faithfully reflect directional hour-to-hour changes in intra-arterial blood pressure (chi 2 = 18.2 and chi 2 = 23.1 for systolic and diastolic blood pressures, respectively, p less than 0.01). No differences were found between the performance of the two Spacelabs devices. Thus, although the absolute accuracy of blood pressure values provided by these monitors in ambulatory subjects is still limited, they seem to be suitable for studies aimed at assessing 24-hour blood pressure profiles quantitatively as well as qualitatively.


Journal of Hypertension | 1993

Isobaric compliance of the radial artery is increased in patients with essential hypertension.

St phane Laurent; Daniel Hayoz; Sylvia Trazzi; Pierre Boutouyrie; Bernard Waeber; Stefano Omboni; Hans R. Brunner; Giuseppe Mancia; Michel E. Safar

Objectives: Hypertension is known to decrease arterial elasticity and systemic compliance. However, the arterial tree is not a homogeneous system, and whether a distal medium-sized artery such as the radial artery behaves like proximal arteries has not been determined. The aims of the present study were, first, to characterize non-invasively the mechanical properties of the radial artery through the determination of the pressure-diameter curve, the distensibility-pressure curve and the compliance—pressure curve, and, secondly, to compare untreated hypertensive patients with normotensive subjects. Methods: A new high-precision echo-tracking device was developed which allows the diameter of peripheral arteries to be measured continuously. By relating the changes in internal diameter (cross-sectional changes) to those in blood pressure, the cross-sectional arterial compliance could be determined. Participants: Seventy-eight untreated mild or moderate essential hypertensive patients aged 24-78 years were compared with 44 normotensive subjects aged 22-81 years. In order to increase the database and provide independent assessments of the variables examined, the cross-sectional study was performed independently using a standardized procedure in three different research centres. Results: The major finding was that diameter, distensibility and compliance of the radial artery of hypertensive patients were not significantly different from those of normotensive controls when the two populations were studied at their mean arterial pressure. Furthermore, when the two populations were compared for the same level of blood pressure, using distensibility- and compliance-pressure curves, it was clear that isobaric distensibility and compliance of hypertensives were not significantly lower than those of normotensives, being either unchanged or higher. Conclusions: These findings are in contrast with the well-known decrease in compliance of proximal large arteries due to hypertension. Whether such a difference between proximal large arteries and distal medium-sized arteries may be related to the structural vascular changes observed with long-standing hypertension is still difficult to analyse in humans, and requires further investigation.


Hypertension | 1990

Sequential spectral analysis of 24-hour blood pressure and pulse interval in humans.

Gianfranco Parati; Paolo Castiglioni; M. Di Rienzo; Stefano Omboni; A. Pedotti; Giuseppe Mancia

Blood pressure and pulse interval are characterized not only by erratic variations but also by rhythmic fluctuations at low-, mid-, and high-frequency (0.025-0.07, 0.07-0.14, and 0.14-0.35 Hz, respectively). However, information on these phenomena has largely been derived from analysis of short-term recordings taken in standardized laboratory conditions. In seven normotensive and 10 untreated mild essential hypertensive subjects, power spectrum analysis was performed on the intra-arterial blood pressure and pulse interval signal collected over a 24-hour period using the fast Fourier transform algorithm and splitting the recording into contiguous segments of 256 beats. About 70% of the segments were suitable for the analysis; the segments excluded for a nonstationary signal amounted to only 30%. All powers were characterized by a high segment-to-segment variability, but in each subject the mid- and high-frequency powers of diastolic blood pressure and the mid-frequency power of systolic blood pressure were markedly reduced during the night as compared with the daytime period, whereas the opposite occurred for the low- and high-frequency powers of the pulse interval. Over the 24-hour period, mid- and high-frequency powers of blood pressure were positively correlated to each other, but both accounted for less than 25% of the 24-hour blood pressure variance. No difference between mean normalized power values of normotensive and hypertensive subjects was observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Gianfranco Parati

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Giuseppe Mancia

University of Milano-Bicocca

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G. Mancia

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Gennaro Bussone

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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