Abstract

Hypertension responsible for more than 10 million deaths annually worldwide and abnormal diurnal blood pressure (BP) variation is associated with cardiovascular events. This study aimed to investigate the association between the 24-h ambulatory night BP dipping and morning BP surge (MS) with characteristic of coronary artery lesions that may contribute cardiovascular events and mortality burden. A cross sectional study over 1-year, collected 263 cases of hypertensive (80%) and non-hypertensive patients, aged 61 ± 10 years, who undergoing invasive coronary angiography (CAG) and 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring admitted to cardiology department complain of chest pain. The night-time/day-time dip and sleep-trough MS were calculated. Non-dipper status was considered when night-time/day-time dip < 10%, and significant coronary lesion (SCL) when ≥ 50 % stenosis in 1.5 mm vessels. The SYNTAX (Synergy Between Percutaneous Coronary Intervention with Taxus and Cardiac Surgery) score was used to quantify the complexity of SCL. The mean morning systolic BP (SBP) surge was higher in the high SYNTAX Score subgroup than low and intermediate subgroups (25 ± 11 vs 17 ± 13 and 10 ± 10 mmHg, p < 0.010). Non-dipper SBP status was more frequently in patients with SCL than non-SCL (p < 0.019). In ordinal regression, hypertension was independent predictor of SCL (odd ratio: 0.40, p < 0.003), the night-time/day-time BP dip was independent predictor of being in a higher SYNTAX score subgroup (systolic odd ratio: 0.88, diastolic odd ratio: 1.14 p < 0.05). Hypertension is associated with SCL and the night-time/day-time BP dip as a continuous variable is associated with complex coronary lesion. Non-dipping as categorical variable and morning BP surge were not independent predictors of significant or complex coronary lesions.

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