Reproducibility of Nocturnal Blood Pressure Assessed by Self-Measurement of Blood Pressure at Home
- 1 January 2007
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Japanese Society of Hypertension in Hypertension Research
- Vol. 30 (8), 707-712
- https://doi.org/10.1291/hypres.30.707
Abstract
To assess the reproducibility of nocturnal blood pressure (BP) during sleep as measured using a self-measurement device at home, we obtained repeated nocturnal home BP at 0200 h and quality of sleep assessment from a diary in 556 subjects (71% women, 62.4±11.1 years) in the general population. We used an Omron device (HEM-747IC-N, Omron Healthcare Co., Ltd., Kyoto, Japan), with which the time and frequency of monitoring can be preset and the readings stored. The mean±SD of the difference between test-retest BP measurements was 0.7±15.1 mmHg systolic and 0.2±9.7 mmHg diastolic with a mean interval of 5.9 days. The absolute differences were greater than 10 mmHg in 261 (46.9%) subjects for systolic and 145 (26.0%) subjects for diastolic. There was no evidence of regression to the mean in nocturnal measurements over at least three nights (n=390, p>0.22). The differences (the first minus the second measurement) were large in subjects who experienced sleep disturbance only in the first (n=64, 2.3±13.6 mmHg and 1.6±9.6 mmHg for systolic and diastolic, respectively) or second sessions (n=56, −4.1±16.4 mmHg and −2.5±11.4 mmHg) compared with the subjects without sleep disturbance (n=66, 1.5±17.8 mmHg and 0.8±10.3 mmHg) and those with sleep disturbance (n=370, 0.9±14.5 mmHg and 0.2±9.3 mmHg) in both sessions. In conclusion, the reproducibility of single nocturnal BP as assessed using a self-measurement device at home was not good, especially for subjects who experienced different quality of sleep in each session. To evaluate nocturnal BP using a self-measurement device, estimation of quality of sleep is indispensable.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Japanese Society of Hypertension Guidelines for the Management of Hypertension (JSH 2004)Hypertension Research, 2006
- Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood PressureHypertension, 2003
- Jananese Society of Hypertension (JSH) Guidelines for Self-Monitoring of Blood Pressure at HomeHypertension Research, 2003
- Prognostic significance of the nocturnal decline in blood pressure in individuals with and without high 24-h blood pressureJournal Of Hypertension, 2002
- Characteristics of blood pressure measured at home in the morning and in the eveningJournal Of Hypertension, 1999
- Reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in daily practiceJournal of Human Hypertension, 1999
- Factors affecting ambulatory blood pressure reproducibility. Results of the HARVEST Trial. Hypertension and Ambulatory Recording Venetia Study.Hypertension, 1994
- Limited reproducibility of hourly blood pressure values obtained by ambulatory blood pressure monitoringJournal Of Hypertension, 1992
- STATISTICAL METHODS FOR ASSESSING AGREEMENT BETWEEN TWO METHODS OF CLINICAL MEASUREMENTThe Lancet, 1986
- Circadian variation of blood pressure in autonomic failure.Circulation, 1983