Objective: With the advent of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has come the awareness that blood pressure (BP) normally drops, or "dips," at night by roughly 10%. A number of pathological conditions have been associated with the nondipping of nocturnal BP. In general, researchers have looked at dipping in neurological and cardiovascular disorders. We examined the extent to which nocturnal nondipping might be influenced by relatively gross measures of social environment. Methods: This study examined 78 healthy adults and adults with mild hypertension who were not currently receiving medication, aged 25 to 52 years (mean age = 38.2). Forty-two participants self-identified as black and 36 identified as white. Results: Age, body mass index,...
Blood pressure (BP) in healthy individuals typically exhibits normal diurnal variation ("nocturnal d...
Nondippers (people whose sleep systolic blood pressure (SBP) fails to decrease >10% from daytime SBP...
Despite the role of anxiety, depression and hostility in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases...
Objective: With the advent of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has come the awareness that blood...
Objective: To determine if nocturnal blood pressure (BP) dipping among non-Hispanic blacks is influe...
African Americans exhibit a lower degree of nocturnal blood pressure (BP) dipping compared with Whit...
ObjectiveLiving in adverse neighborhood conditions has been linked with greater prevalence of cardio...
Blunted blood pressure dipping is an established predictor of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Altho...
Background: Literature has shown that the African American community disproportionately experiences ...
Individual differences in blood pressure response to sleep have been shown to have pathological rele...
Objective: A nighttime dip in blood pressure is associated with decreased risk of cardiovascular mor...
To investigate the relation between nocturnal decline in blood pressure and mortality, we obtained a...
Background In this study, we assessed whether the white-coat effect (difference between office and d...
One potential explanation for the predictive utility of ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring is...
Introduction: The dipping phenomenon is a physiological drop in blood pressure (around 10–20%) durin...
Blood pressure (BP) in healthy individuals typically exhibits normal diurnal variation ("nocturnal d...
Nondippers (people whose sleep systolic blood pressure (SBP) fails to decrease >10% from daytime SBP...
Despite the role of anxiety, depression and hostility in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases...
Objective: With the advent of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring has come the awareness that blood...
Objective: To determine if nocturnal blood pressure (BP) dipping among non-Hispanic blacks is influe...
African Americans exhibit a lower degree of nocturnal blood pressure (BP) dipping compared with Whit...
ObjectiveLiving in adverse neighborhood conditions has been linked with greater prevalence of cardio...
Blunted blood pressure dipping is an established predictor of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Altho...
Background: Literature has shown that the African American community disproportionately experiences ...
Individual differences in blood pressure response to sleep have been shown to have pathological rele...
Objective: A nighttime dip in blood pressure is associated with decreased risk of cardiovascular mor...
To investigate the relation between nocturnal decline in blood pressure and mortality, we obtained a...
Background In this study, we assessed whether the white-coat effect (difference between office and d...
One potential explanation for the predictive utility of ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring is...
Introduction: The dipping phenomenon is a physiological drop in blood pressure (around 10–20%) durin...
Blood pressure (BP) in healthy individuals typically exhibits normal diurnal variation ("nocturnal d...
Nondippers (people whose sleep systolic blood pressure (SBP) fails to decrease >10% from daytime SBP...
Despite the role of anxiety, depression and hostility in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases...