J 2015

Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring for Clinical Applications and Basic Science

CORNELISSEN, Germaine; Cathy Lee GIERKE; Yoshihiko WATANABE; Larry A. BEATY; Jarmila SIEGELOVÁ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring for Clinical Applications and Basic Science

Authors

CORNELISSEN, Germaine (840 United States of America); Cathy Lee GIERKE (840 United States of America); Yoshihiko WATANABE (392 Japan); Larry A. BEATY (840 United States of America); Jarmila SIEGELOVÁ (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution); Alain DELCOURT (840 United States of America); Christian DERUYCK (840 United States of America); Ram B. SINGH (356 India); Miguel A. REVILLA (724 Spain) and Kuniaki OTSUKA (392 Japan)

Edition

World Heart Journal, New York, Nova Science Publishers, 2015, 1556-4002

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Field of Study

30000 3. Medical and Health Sciences

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14110/15:00083493

Organization unit

Faculty of Medicine

Keywords in English

Bland-Altman plot; circadian; daily sphygmochrons; day-to-day variability; individualized chronotherapy; vascular variability disorders

Tags

Tags

International impact, Reviewed
Changed: 3/8/2015 08:55, Soňa Böhmová

Abstract

In the original language

Monitoring for spans longer then 24 hours, prefably for 7 days at the outset, has been advocated to obtain more reliable estimates of the circadian characteristics of blood pressure and heart rate. Herein, using data from a chronotherapy tria, we adress the desirability of complementing the global analysis of the entire record by the computation of daily sphygmochrons to gain a better assessment of the day-to-day variability in the circadian patterns of these variables.