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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Determinants of white-coat syndrome assessed by ambulatory blood pressure or self-measured home blood pressure.

BACKGROUND: Gender, age, smoking, race, and body mass index have been reported to determine the ambulatory white-coat effect (WCE) and white-coat hypertension (WCH). METHODS: Baseline conventional, day-time ambulatory and self-measured home blood pressure measurements from the THOP trial were used to study the effect of gender, age, body mass index, smoking habits and treatment status on the white-coat syndrome as assessed by ambulatory monitoring or self-measurement. RESULTS: The mean systolic/diastolic WCE was 9.1/6.7 mmHg if based on ambulatory blood pressure and 12.2/8.7 mmHg if based on self-measured blood pressure. The ambulatory WCE was significantly higher in women, in older subjects (65+), in obese subjects, in non-smokers and in patients on antihypertensive drug treatment. The self-measured WCE was significantly higher in women and in non-smokers. Ambulatory WCH was present in 6.6% of the untreated patients and 14.2% had self-measured WCH. The proportion of ambulatory WCH was significantly higher in obese subjects; the proportion of self-measured WCH did not differ by gender, age, body mass index, or smoking habits. CONCLUSIONS: The ambulatory white-coat syndrome was determined by gender, age, body mass index, smoking habits, and treatment status. The self-measured white-coat syndrome was greater than the ambulatory white-coat syndrome but depended less on the determinants under study.[1]

References

  1. Determinants of white-coat syndrome assessed by ambulatory blood pressure or self-measured home blood pressure. Den Hond, E., Celis, H., Vandenhoven, G., O'Brien, E., Staessen, J.A. Blood pressure monitoring. (2003) [Pubmed]
 
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