This study hypothesized that physiologically grounded patterns of hemodynamic profile and compensation deficit would be superior to traditional blood pressure reactivity in the prediction of daily-life blood pressure. Impedance cardiography-derived measures and beat-to-beat blood pressure were monitored continuously in 45 subjects during baseline and four tasks. Ambulatory blood pressure measures were obtained combining data from one work day and one off day. The mediating effects of gender and family history of hypertension were considered. Only gender was significantly associated with hemodynamic profile. Regression analysis indicated that typical reactivity measures failed to predict everyday life blood pressure. After controlling for gender and baseline blood pressure, hemodynamic patterns during specific tasks proved to be strong predictors, overcoming limitations of previous reactivity models in predicting real-life blood pressure. Copyright © 2006 Society for Psychophysiological Research.

Hemodynamic profile, compensation deficit, and ambulatory blood pressure / Ottaviani, Cristina; David, Shapiro; Iris B., Goldstein; Jack E., James; Robert, Weiss. - In: PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0048-5772. - 43:1(2006), pp. 46-56. [10.1111/j.1469-8986.2006.00378.x]

Hemodynamic profile, compensation deficit, and ambulatory blood pressure

OTTAVIANI, CRISTINA
Primo
Conceptualization
;
2006

Abstract

This study hypothesized that physiologically grounded patterns of hemodynamic profile and compensation deficit would be superior to traditional blood pressure reactivity in the prediction of daily-life blood pressure. Impedance cardiography-derived measures and beat-to-beat blood pressure were monitored continuously in 45 subjects during baseline and four tasks. Ambulatory blood pressure measures were obtained combining data from one work day and one off day. The mediating effects of gender and family history of hypertension were considered. Only gender was significantly associated with hemodynamic profile. Regression analysis indicated that typical reactivity measures failed to predict everyday life blood pressure. After controlling for gender and baseline blood pressure, hemodynamic patterns during specific tasks proved to be strong predictors, overcoming limitations of previous reactivity models in predicting real-life blood pressure. Copyright © 2006 Society for Psychophysiological Research.
2006
ambulatory blood pressure; cardiovascular reactivity; family history of hypertension; gender; hemodynamic profile; individual differences
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Hemodynamic profile, compensation deficit, and ambulatory blood pressure / Ottaviani, Cristina; David, Shapiro; Iris B., Goldstein; Jack E., James; Robert, Weiss. - In: PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0048-5772. - 43:1(2006), pp. 46-56. [10.1111/j.1469-8986.2006.00378.x]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/399943
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