Bioengineering and Chronobiology Laboratories, University of Vigo, Campus Universitario, Vigo, Pontevedra, Spain.
Chronobiol Int. 2013 Mar;30(1-2):99-115. doi: 10.3109/07420528.2012.701489. Epub 2012 Oct 25.
There is strong association between diabetes and increased risk of end-organ damage, stroke, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) morbidity and mortality. Non-dipping (<10% decline in the asleep relative to awake blood pressure [BP] mean), as determined by ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), is frequent in diabetes and consistently associated with increased CVD risk. The reported prevalence of non-dipping in diabetes is highly variable, probably due to differences in the study groups (normotensive subjects, untreated hypertensives, treated hypertensives), relatively small sample sizes, reliance only on a single, low-reproducibility, 24-h ABPM evaluation per participant, and definition of daytime and nighttime periods by arbitrary selected fixed clock-hour spans. Accordingly, we evaluated the influence of diabetes on the circadian BP pattern by 48-h ABPM (rather than for 24 h to increase reproducibility of results) during which participants maintained a diary listing times of going to bed at night and awakening in the morning. This cross-sectional study involved 12 765 hypertensive patients (6797 men/5968 women), 58.1 ± 14.1 (mean ± SD) yrs of age, enrolled in the Hygia Project, designed to evaluate prospectively CVD risk by ABPM in primary care centers of northwest Spain. Among the participants, 2954 (1799 men/1155 women) had type 2 diabetes. At the time of study, 525/3314 patients with/without diabetes were untreated for hypertension, and the remaining 2429/6497 patients with/without diabetes were treated. Hypertension was defined as awake systolic (SBP)/diastolic (DBP) BP mean ≥135/85 mm Hg, or asleep SBP/DBP mean ≥120/70 mm Hg, or BP-lowering treatment. Hypertensive patients with than without diabetes were more likely to be men and of older age, have diagnoses of microalbuminuria, proteinuria, chronic kidney disease, obstructive sleep apnea, metabolic syndrome, and/or obesity, plus higher glucose, creatinine, uric acid, and triglycerides, but lower cholesterol and estimated glomerular filtration rate. In patients with diabetes, ambulatory SBP was significantly elevated (p < .001), mainly during the hours of nighttime sleep and initial hours after morning awakening, independent of presence/absence of BP-lowering treatment. Ambulatory DBP, however, was significantly higher (p < .001) in patients without diabetes, mainly during the daytime. Differing trends for SBP and DBP between groups resulted in large differences in ambulatory pulse pressure (PP), it being significantly greater (p < .001) throughout the entire 24 h in patients with diabetes, even after correcting for age. Prevalence of non-dipping was significantly higher in patients with than without diabetes (62.1% vs. 45.9%; p < .001). Largest difference between groups was in the prevalence of the riser BP pattern, i.e., asleep SBP mean greater than awake SBP mean (19.9% vs. 8.1% in patients with and without diabetes, respectively; p < .001). Elevated asleep SBP mean was the major basis for the diagnosis of hypertension and/or inadequate BP control among patients with diabetes; thus, among the uncontrolled hypertensive patients with diabetes, 89.2% had nocturnal hypertension. Our findings document significantly elevated prevalence of a blunted nocturnal BP decline in hypertensive patients with diabetes. Most important, prevalence of the riser BP pattern, associated with highest CVD risk among all possible BP patterns, was more than twice as prevalent in diabetes. Patients with diabetes also presented significantly elevated ambulatory PP, reflecting increased arterial stiffness and enhanced CVD risk. These collective findings indicate that diabetes should be included among the clinical conditions for which ABPM is recommended for proper CVD risk assessment.
糖尿病与靶器官损害、中风和心血管疾病(CVD)发病率和死亡率增加密切相关。通过动态血压监测(ABPM)确定的夜间血压(BP)下降<10%(与清醒时的 BP 均值相比),即非杓型血压,在糖尿病中很常见,且始终与 CVD 风险增加相关。据报道,糖尿病中非杓型血压的发生率差异很大,这可能是由于研究人群的不同(血压正常的受试者、未经治疗的高血压患者、经治疗的高血压患者)、样本量相对较小、仅依赖于单一的、重复性低的 24 小时 ABPM 评估、以及通过任意选择的固定时钟小时跨度来定义白天和夜间时段。因此,我们通过 48 小时 ABPM(而不是 24 小时,以提高结果的可重复性)评估了糖尿病对昼夜 BP 模式的影响,在此期间,参与者记录了晚上入睡和早上醒来的时间。这项横断面研究涉及 12765 名高血压患者(6797 名男性/5968 名女性),年龄 58.1±14.1(平均值±标准差)岁,参加了 Hygia 项目,旨在通过西班牙西北部基层医疗中心的 ABPM 前瞻性评估 CVD 风险。在参与者中,有 2954 名(1799 名男性/1155 名女性)患有 2 型糖尿病。在研究时,525/3314 名有/无糖尿病的患者未接受高血压治疗,其余 2429/6497 名有/无糖尿病的患者正在接受治疗。高血压定义为觉醒时收缩压(SBP)/舒张压(DBP)均值≥135/85mmHg,或睡眠时 SBP/DBP 均值≥120/70mmHg,或接受降压治疗。与无糖尿病的患者相比,有糖尿病的患者更可能是男性和年龄较大,有微量白蛋白尿、蛋白尿、慢性肾病、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停、代谢综合征和/或肥胖的诊断,且血糖、肌酐、尿酸和甘油三酯水平更高,但胆固醇和估计肾小球滤过率水平更低。在有糖尿病的患者中,ABPM 中的 SBP 明显升高(p<0.001),主要发生在夜间睡眠期间和清晨觉醒后的最初几个小时,独立于是否存在降压治疗。然而,无糖尿病的患者中,ABPM 中的 DBP 明显升高(p<0.001),主要发生在白天。两组之间 SBP 和 DBP 的不同趋势导致了 ABPM 脉压(PP)的显著差异,在糖尿病患者中,即使在纠正年龄因素后,24 小时内的脉压始终显著更大(p<0.001)。有糖尿病的患者中非杓型血压的发生率明显高于无糖尿病的患者(62.1%比 45.9%;p<0.001)。两组之间最大的差异在于上升型血压模式的发生率,即睡眠时 SBP 均值大于觉醒时 SBP 均值(分别为有和无糖尿病的患者中的 19.9%和 8.1%;p<0.001)。升高的睡眠时 SBP 均值是糖尿病患者诊断高血压和/或血压控制不充分的主要依据;因此,在有未控制的高血压的糖尿病患者中,89.2%存在夜间高血压。我们的研究结果记录了糖尿病患者中夜间 BP 下降明显减弱的显著增加的发生率。最重要的是,上升型血压模式的发生率,与所有可能的血压模式中最高的 CVD 风险相关,在糖尿病中超过两倍。糖尿病患者的 ABPM 脉搏压也显著升高,反映了动脉僵硬度增加和 CVD 风险增加。这些综合研究结果表明,糖尿病应被列入需要 ABPM 进行适当 CVD 风险评估的临床情况之一。