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BACKGROUND:Knowledge of the circadian blood pressure (BP) variations in the acute hospital setting is very limited. METHODS:This is a retrospective analysis of BP data for in-hospital patients stratified by age and sex. We used data collected with the help of a standardised electronic health record system between March 2014 and April 2018 on the adult general wards in four acute hospitals in Oxford, UK. RESULTS:A total of 41,455 unique patient admissions with 1.7 million sets of vital sign measurements have been included in the study. The typical 24-hour systolic BP profile (dipping pattern during sleep followed by a gradual increase during the day) was only seen in the younger age groups (up to 40-49 for men and 30-39 for women). For older age groups, there was a late nocturnal rise in systolic BP, the amplitude of which increased with age. The late nocturnal BP rise above the age of 50 was seen whether or not the patient was treated for or previously identified with hypertension. CONCLUSION:Hospitalised patients' circadian patterns of BP largely mirror those found in the community. High-quality hospital data may allow for identification of patients at significant cardiovascular risk through either opportunistic or systematic screening.

Original publication

DOI

10.1093/ajh/hpz130

Type

Journal article

Journal

American journal of hypertension

Publication Date

16/08/2019

Addresses

Institute of Biomedical Engineering, Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford.