Title of article
Race Affects the Decline in Blood Pressure With Hospitalization
Author/Authors
Paul J. Mills، نويسنده , , Charles C. Berry، نويسنده , , Joel E. Dimsdale، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
6
From page
1091
To page
1096
Abstract
Hospitalization routinely lowers blood pressure (BP). This study examined the effects of race and psychologic characteristics on this phenomenon. Data are reported from two separate cohorts of hypertensive and normotensive black and white men and women who were studied following a stay at a clinical research center where sodium intake was held constant. Blacks (N = 88), as compared to whites (N = 77), showed consistently smaller declines in systolic BP (P< .01) following hospitalization (−11.6 mm Hg SBP v −19.5 mm Hg SBP, respectively). A multiple regression model that treated BP as a function of physiologic and psychologic attributes indicated that preadmission BP level, body mass index, stress level, and anger expression were related to the drop in systolic (r2 = 65%) and diastolic (r2 = 45%) BP brought about by hospitalization (P< .0001). In blacks, high environmental stress ratings were unrelated to the change in BP with hospitalization. In contrast, whites with high environmental stress ratings lowered their BP noticeably with hospitalization. Given that the reduction in BP with hospitalization can be similar to that attained with pharmacologic therapy, these findings may have a bearing on studies examining BP in the hospital.
Keywords
Hospitalization , blacks , race , whites , hypertension , Blood pressure.
Journal title
American Journal of Hypertension
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
American Journal of Hypertension
Record number
646753
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