SIEGELOVÁ, Jarmila, Alena HAVELKOVÁ, Jiří DUŠEK, Michal POHANKA, Leona DUNKLEROVÁ, Pavel VANK, G. CORNELISSEN a F. HALBERG. Seven-day ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: blood pressure variability at rest and during exercise. In HALBERG F., KENNER T., SIEGELOVÁ J., DOBŠÁK P. Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2012. Brno: Masarykova univerzita, 2012, s. 128-136. ISBN 978-80-210-6026-5.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Seven-day ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: blood pressure variability at rest and during exercise
Autoři SIEGELOVÁ, Jarmila, Alena HAVELKOVÁ, Jiří DUŠEK, Michal POHANKA, Leona DUNKLEROVÁ, Pavel VANK, G. CORNELISSEN a F. HALBERG.
Vydání Brno, Noninvasive methods in cardiology 2012, od s. 128-136, 9 s. 2012.
Nakladatel Masarykova univerzita
Další údaje
Typ výsledku Stať ve sborníku
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
WWW URL
Organizační jednotka Lékařská fakulta
ISBN 978-80-210-6026-5
Změnil Změnila: Mgr. Tereza Miškechová, učo 341652. Změněno: 26. 3. 2021 14:44.
Anotace
Because the diagnosis of hypertension is generally based on casual measurement of blood pressure in general practitioner office and these values of blood pressure are higher than values of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, the table of blood pressure thresholds for definition of hypertension with different types of measurement is included in the Guidelines for Management of Hypertension (2007). According to this table the threshold for systolic blood pressure is 140 mmHg in the office or clinic, 125–130 mmHg during 24 hours, 130–135 mmHg during day and 120 mmHg during night. The corresponding values for diastolic blood pressure are 90 mmHg in the office and clinic, 80 mmHg during 24 hours, 85 mmHg during day and 75 mmHg during night. The values for home measurement are the same as for ambulatory monitoring during day. The condition for reliability of diagnosis is low day-to-day variation of night-time and day-time pressure values.
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 26. 4. 2024 11:31