Abstract
BACKGROUNDCardiac and cerebrovascular events in hypertensive patients are related to specific features of the 24-hour diurnal blood pressure (BP) profile (i.e., daytime and nighttime BP, nocturnal dip (ND), and morning surge (MS)). This investigation aimed to characterize 24-hour diurnal systolic BP (SBP) with parameters that correlate directly with daytime and nighttime SBP, ND, and MS using nonlinear mixed effects modeling.METHODSAmbulatory 24-hour SBP measurements (ABPM) of 196 nontreated subjects from three ethnic groups were available. A population model was parameterized in NONMEM to estimate and evaluate the parameters baseline SBP (BSL), nadir (minimum SBP during the night), and change (SBP difference between day and night). Associations were tested between these parameters and patient-related factors to explain interindividual variability.RESULTSThe diurnal SBP profile was adequately described as the sum of 2 cosine functions. The following typical values (interindividual variability) were found: BSL = 139mm Hg (11%); nadir = 122mm Hg (14%); change = 25mm Hg (52%), and residual error = 12mm Hg. The model parameters correlate well with daytime and nighttime SBP, ND, and MS (R 2 = 0.50-0.92). During covariate analysis, ethnicity was found to be associated with change; change was 40% higher in white Dutch subjects and 26.8% higher in South Asians than in blacks.CONCLUSIONSThe developed population model allows simultaneous estimation of BSL, nadir, and change for all individuals in the investigated population, regardless of individual number of SBP measurements. Ethnicity was associated with change. The model provides a tool to evaluate and optimize the sampling frequency for 24-hour ABPM. © 2013 © American Journal of Hypertension, Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Van Rijn-Bikker, P. C., Snelder, N., Ackaert, O., Van Hest, R. M., Ploeger, B. A., Van Montfrans, G. A., … Mathôt, R. A. (2013). Nonlinear mixed effects modeling of the diurnal blood pressure profile in a multiracial population. American Journal of Hypertension, 26(9), 1103–1113. https://doi.org/10.1093/ajh/hpt088
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