1. Diurnal blood pressure and urine production in acute spinal cord injury compared with controls.
- Author
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Goh MY, Millard MS, Wong EC, Brown DJ, Frauman AG, and O'Callaghan CJ
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Female, Humans, Hypertension blood, Hypertension epidemiology, Hypertension etiology, Hypertension urine, Male, Middle Aged, Paralysis blood, Paralysis epidemiology, Paralysis etiology, Paralysis urine, Photoperiod, Polyuria blood, Polyuria epidemiology, Polyuria etiology, Polyuria urine, Prevalence, Sex Characteristics, Spinal Cord Injuries complications, Spinal Cord Injuries epidemiology, Urine Specimen Collection, Young Adult, Blood Pressure physiology, Circadian Rhythm physiology, Spinal Cord Injuries blood, Spinal Cord Injuries urine
- Abstract
Study Design: This is a prospective observational study., Objectives: The objective of this study was to determine time-dependent changes in diurnal blood pressure (BP) and urine production in acute spinal cord injury (SCI)., Setting: This study was conducted in a specialist, state-based spinal cord service in Victoria, Australia., Methods: Consenting patients admitted consecutively with acute SCI were compared with patients confined to bed rest while awaiting surgery and with mobilising able-bodied controls. Participants underwent ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), measurement of diurnal urine production and rated orthostatic symptoms over 1 year. Participants with night:day systolic BP (SBP) <90% were classified as dippers, 90-100% as non-dippers and >100% as reverse dippers., Results: Participants comprised tetraplegics (n=47, 40.0±17.3 years), paraplegics (n=35, 34.4±13.9 years), immobilised (n=18, 30.9±11.3 years) and mobilising (n=44, 33.1±13.5 years) controls. At baseline, 24-h BP was significantly lower in tetraplegics (111.8±1.9/62.1±1.1 mm Hg) but not in paraplegics (116.7± 1.4/66.0±1.1 mm Hg), compared with controls (117.1 ±1.3/69.1±1.1 mm Hg), adjusting for gender. This difference was not observed at 1 year. The average night:day SBP in mobilising controls was 86.1±0.7%, differing from paraplegics (94.0±1.5%, P<0.001) and tetraplegics (101.5±1.5%, P<0.001). Urine production in tetraplegics and paraplegics did not fall at night compared with the day. Abnormal diurnal BP and orthostatic symptoms in tetraplegics persisted throughout the study. Nocturnal hypertension was observed in 27% (n=9) of tetraplegics, of whom only 2 had day hypertension. All mobilising controls with nocturnal hypertension (n=6, 14%) had day hypertension., Conclusion: People with SCI have a high prevalence of isolated nocturnal hypertension, reverse dipping, orthostatic intolerance and nocturnal polyuria. Cardiovascular risk management and assessment of orthostatic symptoms should include ABPM.
- Published
- 2017
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