Blood-pressure control in the hypertensive population

被引:254
|
作者
Mancia, G
Sega, R
Milesi, C
Cesana, G
Zanchetti, A
机构
[1] OSPED SAN GERARDO, CTR STUDI PATOL CRONICODEGENERAT, MONZA, ITALY
[2] OSPED SAN GERARDO, CTR FISIOL CLIN & IPERTENS, IST CLIN MED, MONZA, ITALY
[3] UNIV MILAN, MILAN, ITALY
[4] ISTRA, MILAN, ITALY
来源
LANCET | 1997年 / 349卷 / 9050期
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0140-6736(96)07099-7
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background In large-scale surveys of individuals with hypertension those whose clinic blood pressure is reduced to 140/90 mm Hg or less have been found to represent only a small fraction of the hypertensive population. We assessed whether these results arise because of a white-coat effect elevating clinic blood pressure. Methods We randomly selected 2400 individuals from the town of Monza, Italy, and invited them to take part in our study. We measured clinic blood pressure as well as home (morning and evening measurements), and 24 h ambulatory blood pressure-ie, blood pressures largely devoid of a effect. Based on clinic blood pressure were then classified as normotensive, untreated hypertensive (clinic blood pressure>140 mm Hg systolic and/or >90 mm Hg diastolic), or treated hypertensive (having antihypertensive treatment). The mean blood pressures for each group were calculated. Findings 1651 people took part in the study. The clinic blood pressure of treated hypertensives (n=207; 146.9 [SD 18] mm Hg/90.2 [8.6] mm Hg) was only slightly less than in untreated hypertensives (n=402; 148 [15.2] mm Hg/93.3 [8] mm Hg) and in both groups the blood pressure values were much greater than those of normotensive individuals (n=1042; 119.5 [10.3] mm Hg/78.1 [6.6] mm Hg) p<0.001. Averaged home and 24 h blood pressures were lower than clinic blood pressures but similarly higher in untreated and treated hypertensive individuals when compared with normotensive individuals. This was also the case for day and night average blood pressures. The number of treated hypertensive patients found to have blood pressures within the normal limits was small not only when based on clinic blood pressure values but also when based on ambulatory blood-pressure values. Interpretation In the hypertensive population the number of patients with inadequate blood-pressure control is high not only when assessed in the clinic but also when assessed by ambulatory-blood-pressure monitoring or at home. The high blood-pressure values commonly found in treated hypertensive individuals cannot be accounted for by a white-coat effect but by a true lack of daily-life blood-pressure control.
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页码:454 / 457
页数:4
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