Abstract

To investigate the associations of the orthostatic blood pressure changes in older patients with isolated systolic hypertension. A total of 2716 patients, 917 men and 1799 women, aged > or = 60 years, were examined at three separate outpatient visits whilst receiving placebo during the single-blind run-in phase of the Syst-Eur trial. The orthostatic blood pressure changes were calculated by subtracting the average of two blood pressure readings with the patient in the supine position from the mean of two readings obtained after the patient had stood for 2 min. An orthostatic blood pressure drop by at least 20 mmHg systolic or 10 mmHg diastolic was considered exaggerated. For the three run-in visits combined, the supine blood pressure was 175 +/- 13 mmHg systolic and 86 +/- 6 mmHg diastolic (means +/- SD). With the patients standing the systolic blood pressure was 5 +/- 12 mmHg lower, whereas the diastolic blood pressure was 2 +/- 7 mmHg higher. An exaggerated fall in systolic blood pressure was observed on at least 1 visit in 21.0% of the patients and on all three visits in 2.5%. The corresponding values for diastolic blood pressure were 9.7 and 0.4%. The orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure increased with previous antihypertensive treatment, age and smoking, but decreased with a higher sitting pulse rate and usual alcohol consumption versus none. The rise in diastolic blood pressure upon standing was higher in women than in men, was curvilinearly associated with age and increased with the sitting diastolic blood pressure. By multiple logistic regression analysis, the odds of having a persistent or occasional exaggerated orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure were 22% higher in women than in men. The odds increased with previous antihypertensive treatment (by 42%), age (by 1.4%/year), electrocardiographic left ventricular mass (by 15%/mV) and sitting systolic blood pressure (by 0.9%/mmHg), but decreased with sitting pulse rate (by 1.9%/beat per min). An exaggerated orthostatic fall in diastolic blood pressure was 30% more likely in men; the likelihood increased with age (by 6.4%/year) and decreased with sitting diastolic blood pressure (by 6.6%/mmHg). An exaggerated orthostatic blood pressure fall in older patients with isolated systolic hypertension is associated mainly with gender, age and blood pressure level. Previous antihypertensive treatment, a lower pulse rate and a lower electrocardiographic left ventricular mass were also associated with an exaggerated orthostatic fall in systolic blood pressure.

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