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Effect of patient gender on short-term blood pressure variability in hemodialysis patients

Authors :
Marieta P. Theodorakopoulou
Maria-Eleni Alexandrou
Artemios G. Karagiannidis
Virginia Geladari
Georgia Polychronidou
Aikaterini Papagianni
Pantelis Sarafidis
Source :
Journal of Human Hypertension.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Increased blood pressure variability (BPV) is strongly associated with cardiovascular events in end-stage kidney disease patients. Male hemodialysis patients present higher cardiovascular risk compared with females. The aim of this study is to investigate sex differences in short-term BPV in hemodialysis patients. 129 male and 91 female hemodialysis patients that underwent 48-h ABPM were included in this analysis. Standard deviation (SD), weighted SD (wSD), coefficient of variation (CV), and average real variability (ARV) of SBP and DBP were calculated with validated formulas. Age, dialysis vintage and history of major comorbidities did not differ between men and women. 48-h SBP/DBP (137.2 ± 17.4/81.9 ± 12.1 mmHg vs 132.2 ± 19.2/75.9 ± 11.7 mmHg, p = 0.045/0.001) was significantly higher in men than women. During the 48-h period, all systolic BPV indices were similar between men and women (48-h SBP-ARV: 12.0 ± 2.9 vs 12.1 ± 3.2 mmHg, p = 0.683); 48-h DBP-SD, DBP-wSD and DBP-ARV (9.1 ± 1.6 vs 8.4 ± 1.8 mmHg, p = 0.005) were higher in men. In conclusion, short-term diastolic BPV indices are higher in male than female hemodialysis patients. Increased BPV may impact on the higher incidence of cardiovascular events observed in male hemodialysis patients.

Subjects

Subjects :
Internal Medicine

Details

ISSN :
14765527 and 09509240
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Human Hypertension
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9de7357566f6c579e98389918284908d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41371-022-00725-6