The investigators aim to investigate whether central systolic blood pressure, as measured during regular 24 hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM), is a better predictor of left ventricular mass than peripheral systolic blood pressure during ABPM.
It seems obvious that central blood pressures are pathophysiologically more relevant than peripheral blood pressures for the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease: it is central systolic pressure (cSBP) against the heart ejects (afterload), and it is central pulse pressure (cPP) that distends the large elastic arteries. Indeed, cSBP and cPP have been associated more closely with left ventricular hypertrophy and carotid atherosclerosis as markers of hypertensive end-organ damage than brachial pressures in various populations. However, in these studies office blood pressure measurements have been used. As ABPM measurements per se show a closer association with hypertensive end-organ damage than office measurements, and as the investigators have recently developed and validated a novel algorithm (ARCSolver) to calculate central blood pressures from peripheral waveforms, the investigators speculate that cSBP measured during ABPM may be the best predictor of left ventricular mass.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
350
no intervention is performed
Cardiology Department, Klinikum Wels-Grieskirchen
Wels, Upper Austria, Austria
Cardiology Department, University of Graz
Graz, Austria
Cardiology Department, University of Lübeck
Lübeck, Germany
Left ventricular mass (m-mode echocardiography)
Time frame: measured within 4 weeks from ABPM
urine albumine / creatinine ratio
Time frame: measured within 2 weeks from ABPM but before antihypertensive treatment is started
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