Mansoor G A, White W B, McCabe E J, Giacco S
Section of Hypertension and Clinical Pharmacology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington 06030-3940, USA.
Am J Hypertens. 2000 Mar;13(3):262-7. doi: 10.1016/s0895-7061(99)00147-8.
We studied how closely changes in electronically monitored physical activity are reflected in changes in blood pressure and heart rate in a group of untreated hypertensive subjects. Thirty-nine hypertensive patients (office blood pressure > 140/ 90 mm Hg) of mean age 57 +/- 10 years (mean +/-SD) wore an ambulatory blood pressure monitor and a wrist actigraph simultaneously. Both average and peak activity for 5 min before each valid blood pressure reading were determined, as was average activity for awake and sleep periods, determined by patient kept diaries. For the overall group, awake and 24-h activities were inversely correlated to age (n = 39, r = -0.42; P = 0.01 and n = 39, r = -0.38; P = 0.01, respectively). No correlation was found between group awake activity and group-average blood pressure or heart rate. For individual patients, there was marked variation in the degree of correlation between awake activity measures (both peak and average) and blood pressure and heart rate. The strongest positive correlation was between activity levels and the heart rate-pressure product. Nondipper profile hypertensives had higher sleep activity than dipper hypertensives (44 +/- 28 units/min v 25 +/- 20 units/min, df = 37, t = 2.12; P = 0.04), but awake activity levels were similar. The higher sleep activity remained after adjustment for age. These findings indicate that the relationship between actigraphic activity and hemodynamic parameters is highly variable and that the rate-pressure product is the strongest correlate of short-term activity. Furthermore, hypertensives with the nondipper profile have higher sleep activity than dipper hypertensives. These findings stress the need for further study into the role of day-to-day activity in determining ambulatory blood pressure and heart rate variability.
我们研究了一组未经治疗的高血压患者中,电子监测的身体活动变化在血压和心率变化中得到反映的紧密程度。39名高血压患者(诊室血压>140/90 mmHg),平均年龄57±10岁(平均±标准差),同时佩戴动态血压监测仪和腕部活动记录仪。在每次有效血压读数前5分钟的平均和峰值活动均被测定,同时通过患者记日记来确定清醒期和睡眠期的平均活动。对于整个研究组,清醒期和24小时活动与年龄呈负相关(n = 39,r = -0.42;P = 0.01和n = 39,r = -0.38;P = 0.01)。未发现研究组清醒期活动与组平均血压或心率之间存在相关性。对于个体患者,清醒期活动指标(峰值和平均值)与血压和心率之间的相关程度存在显著差异。最强的正相关存在于活动水平与心率-血压乘积之间。非勺型高血压患者的睡眠活动高于勺型高血压患者(44±28单位/分钟对25±20单位/分钟,自由度=37,t = 2.12;P = 0.04),但清醒期活动水平相似。调整年龄后,较高的睡眠活动依然存在。这些发现表明,活动记录仪记录的活动与血流动力学参数之间的关系高度可变,且心率-血压乘积是短期活动的最强相关因素。此外,非勺型高血压患者的睡眠活动高于勺型高血压患者。这些发现强调了进一步研究日常活动在决定动态血压和心率变异性中作用的必要性。