The authors sought to determine the association between the blunted morning blood pressure (BP) surge and nocturnal BP dipping of the “riser” pattern in 501 patients with hypertension enrolled in the ACHIEVE-ONE (Ambulatory Blood Pressure Control and Home Blood Pressure [Morning and Evening] Lowering by the N-Channel Blocker Cilnidipine) trial. The patients' sleep-trough morning BP surge and prewaking surge were calculated and then classified according to their nocturnal systolic BP reduction pattern as extreme dippers, dippers, nondippers, and risers. The prevalence of the riser pattern was significantly higher in both the lowest sleep-trough morning BP surge decile and the prewaking surge decile (blunted surge group) compared with the remaining deciles (56.0% vs 10.4% [P
CITATION STYLE
Fujiwara, T., Tomitani, N., Sato, K., Okura, A., Suzuki, N., & Kario, K. (2017). The relationship between a blunted morning surge and a reversed nocturnal blood pressure dipping or “riser” pattern. Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 19(11), 1108–1114. https://doi.org/10.1111/jch.13087
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