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Journal Club ADAM WILCOX, PHARMD 1/22/14
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Patient Case DB, 70 yo M Overall ABPM summary Avg. BP = 116/62 Daytime = 120/63 Nighttime = 103/58 Systolic load: 9.2% Night dip: 14.2% First 3 blood pressures (in office) 161/86 158/82 155/87 9/21 (43%) of nighttime readings have SBP <100 Medications Lisinopril Beta-blocker
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Ambulatory BP Monitoring Monitor blood pressure over a 24 hour period Every 20 minutes while awake Every 30 minutes while sleeping Indications Variable office blood pressure readings Differences between in home and office readings (white coat) Hypertension resistant to multiple medications
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What is normal? 150/90 or 140/90? 24 hour: <130/80 Daytime: <135/85 Nighttime: <120/70 SBP load: >30% increases cardiovascular risk Nighttime dip: 10-20% is normal Non-dippers: LVH, CHF, microalbuminuria, GFR reduction
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Question Does nocturnal blood pressure drop have an effect on cardiovascular mortality?
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PICO P: DB, 70yo male I: Extreme dippers(BP decline ≥ 20% of daytime BP) Non-dippers(BP decline ≥ 0% but < 10% of daytime BP) Inverted dippers(no nighttime BP decline) C: Dippers(BP decline ≥ 10% but < 20% of daytime BP) O: Cardiovascular mortality
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Journal Article Ohkubo T, Imai Y, Tsuji I, et al. Relation Between Nocturnal Decline in Blood Pressure and Mortality. American Journal of Hypertension 1997(10)1201-1207.
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Study Basics Objective: To investigate the relationship between nocturnal decline in blood pressure and mortality Type: Prospective trial involving 1542 residents of a rural Japanese community Exclusion: <40 years old, hospitalized individuals, demented patients, people who worked out of town Study population: 565 men(62.5 years) and 977 women(61.2 years) Primarily farmers, retirees, housewives Outcomes: Overall mortality, cardiovascular, non-cardiovascular
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Methods Needed at least 8 hours of daytime readings and 4 hours of nighttime readings to be included in the analysis Average duration of monitoring was 22.3 hours Average # of measurements 44.6 Average 24 hr, daytime, nighttime, and nocturnal decline were calculated for each person %decline nocBP = (daytime BP – nighttime BP) x 100/daytime BP Classified into groups(extreme, dippers, non-dippers, inverted)
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Analysis/Results Kaplan-Meier life table, SAS LIFETEST procedure, Cox proportional hazards regression model Mean follow up time 5.1 years(0.1-8.1) Data adjusted for age, sex, smoking status, history of CVD, BP levels, and use of hypertensive medications
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Analysis/Results Sharp declines in the inverted dipper group
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Limitations Prospective study All participants came from a small Japanese community
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What does this mean to practice? For DB… Avg. BP = 116/62 Daytime = 120/63 Nighttime = 103/58 Systolic load: 9.2% Night dip: 14.2% In office avg. = 158/85 For extreme dippers… Prevent the early morning blood pressure surge (stroke, MI) Switch to short-acting Timing of medications For non-dippers/inverted… Move one of your medications to bedtime
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Are you tired of being on call? A perfect bracket wins $1 billion
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References 1. Ernst M. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring: Recent Evidence and Clinical Pharmacy Applications. Pharmacotherapy 2013;33(1)69-83. 2. Ernst M. Nighttime Blood Pressure Is the Blood Pressure. Pharmacotherapy 2009;29(1)3-6. 3. Kaplan N. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring and White Coat Hypertension in Adults. UptoDate Nov. 2013. 4. Ohkubo T, Imai Y, Tsuji I, et al. Relation Between Nocturnal Decline in Blood Pressure and Mortality. American Journal of Hypertension 1997(10)1201-1207.
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