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Associations between Five-Year Blood Pressure Variability and Risk of Cardiovascular Events and Mortality

Authors :
Tong Liu
Wai-Kit Ming
William K.K. Wu
Bernard M.Y. Cheung
Wing Tak Wong
Kamalan Jeevaratnam
Gary Tse
Jiandong Zhou
Qingpeng Zhang
Sharen Lee
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

IntroductionBlood pressure variability, in addition to blood pressure itself, has been used as a predictor for mortality. This study examined the predictive power of baseline/latest/mean/median blood pressure and blood pressure variability measures for all-cause mortality and adverse cardiovascular outcomes.MethodsThe retrospective observational study analyzed patients who presented to family medicine clinics between 1st January, 2000 and 31st December, 2001. Blood pressure measurements were obtained over a five-year period. Standard deviation (SD), root mean square (RMS), coefficient of variation (CV) and a variability score (number of >=5 mmHg blood pressure change) were used as measures of blood pressure variability. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality and the secondary outcomes were heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, and transient ischemic attack (TIA)/stroke, with follow-up until 31 December 2019.ResultsThis study included 37540 patients (n=29597 patients with >=3 blood pressure measurements). A nonlinear inverse U-shaped relationship was observed between baseline/latest/maximum/minimum/mean/median/RMS measures of diastolic blood pressure and time-to-death for all-cause mortality (PConclusionNonlinear inverse U-shaped relationships were observed between blood pressure and its variability measures and all-cause mortality. Higher blood pressure variability was associated with increased risk of all-cause mortality, heart failure, acute myocardial infarction and TIA/stroke.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b1d165275f37d47168d2a6ab2453f3fd