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Publication year
2008Source
Journal of Hypertension, 26, 10, (2008), pp. 1993-2000ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
Internal Medicine
Physiology
Primary and Community Care
IQ Healthcare
Medical Microbiology
Former Organization
Centre for Quality of Care Research
Journal title
Journal of Hypertension
Volume
vol. 26
Issue
iss. 10
Page start
p. 1993
Page end
p. 2000
Subject
IGMD 5: Health aging / healthy living; NCEBP 14: Cardiovascular diseases; Synthetic Organic Chemistry; UMCN 2.2: Vascular medicine and diabetesAbstract
BACKGROUND: We studied the repeatability of the ambulatory arterial stiffness index (AASI), which can be computed from 24-h blood pressure (BP) recordings as unity minus the regression slope of diastolic on systolic BP. METHODS: One hundred and fifty-two hypertensive outpatients recruited in Nijmegen (mean age = 46.2 years; 76.3% with systolic and diastolic hypertension) and 145 patients enrolled in the Systolic Hypertension in Europe (Syst-Eur) trial (71.0 years) underwent 24-h BP monitoring at a median interval of 8 and 31 days, respectively. We used the repeatability coefficient, which is twice the SD of the within-participant differences between repeat recordings, and expressed it as a percentage of four times the SD of the mean of the paired measurements. RESULTS: Mean AASI (crude or derived by time-weighted or robust regression) and 24-h pulse pressure (PP) were similar on repeat recordings in both cohorts. In Nijmegen patients, repeatability coefficients of AASI and PP were approximately 50%. In Syst-Eur trial patients, repeatability coefficient was approximately 60% for AASI and approximately 40% for PP. For comparison, repeatability coefficients for 24-h systolic and diastolic BP were approximately 30%. Differences in AASI between paired recordings were correlated with differences in the goodness of fit (r2) of the AASI regression line as well as with differences in the night-to-day BP ratio. However, in sensitivity analyses stratified for type of hypertension, r2, or dipping status, repeatability coefficients for AASI did not widely depart from 50 to 60% range. CONCLUSION: Estimates of mean AASI were not different between repeat recordings, and repeatability coefficients were within the 50-60% range.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [203812]
- Electronic publications [102283]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [80326]
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