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Nighttime hemodynamic phenotype. A novel risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially heart fa...

Nighttime hemodynamic phenotype. A novel risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially heart fa...

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2766574257

Nighttime hemodynamic phenotype. A novel risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially heart failure: the practitioner-based nationwide JAMP study

About this item

Full title

Nighttime hemodynamic phenotype. A novel risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially heart failure: the practitioner-based nationwide JAMP study

Publisher

Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Journal title

Clinical research in cardiology, 2023-01, Vol.112 (1), p.98-110

Language

English

Formats

Publication information

Publisher

Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg

More information

Scope and Contents

Contents

Background
Non-dipper and riser patterns of nocturnal blood pressure (BP) are risk factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD), including heart failure (HF). However, the risk associated with a disrupted nocturnal pattern of heart rate is not well known.
Objectives
To investigate whether the nighttime heart rate is a risk factor for HF, alongside nighttime BP phenotype.
Methods
The practitioner-based, nationwide, prospective Japan Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring Prospective (JAMP) study included patients with ≥ 1 CVD risk factor but without symptomatic CVD at baseline. All patients underwent 24-h ambulatory BP monitoring at baseline and were followed annually. Nocturnal heart rate dipping (%) was calculated as 100•[1 − nighttime/daytime heart rate].
Results
During a mean 4.5 years’ follow-up in 6,359 patients (mean age 68.6 years), there were 306 CVD events (119 stroke, 99 coronary artery disease, and 88 HF). A 10-beats/min increase in nighttime heart rate was significantly associated with a 36–47% increase in the risk of total CVD, stroke and HF events independently of office SBP and nighttime SBP (all
p
 < 0.005). The CVD and HF risk associated with nocturnal heart rate dipping status was independent of office and 24-h systolic BP and nocturnal BP dipping status (
p
 < 0.001). Performance of the final model for predicting HF including BP parameters was significantly improved by the addition of nocturnal heart rate dipping patterns (
p
 = 0.038; C-statistic 0.852).
Conclusion
Nighttime non-dipper and riser patterns of heart rate were associated with CVD especially HF, independently and additively of nocturnal BP dipping status, indicating the importance of antihypertensive strategies targeting nighttime hemodynamics.
Clinical trial registration
URL:
https://www.umin.ac.jp/ctr/
; Unique identifier: UMIN000020377.
Graphical abstract...

Alternative Titles

Full title

Nighttime hemodynamic phenotype. A novel risk factor for cardiovascular disease, especially heart failure: the practitioner-based nationwide JAMP study

Identifiers

Primary Identifiers

Record Identifier

TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2766574257

Permalink

https://devfeature-collection.sl.nsw.gov.au/record/TN_cdi_proquest_journals_2766574257

Other Identifiers

ISSN

1861-0684,1861-0692

E-ISSN

1861-0692

DOI

10.1007/s00392-022-02051-w

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