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Original Contribution
JAMA. 1983;249(20):2792-2798. doi: 10.1001/jama.1983.03330440030027

The Prognostic Value of Ambulatory Blood Pressures

  1. Dorthee Perloff, MD;
  2. Maurice Sokolow, MD;
  3. Ronald Cowan, MA
  1. From the Department of Medicine (Drs Perloff and Sokolow), the Cardiovascular Research Institute (Dr Sokolow), and the Computer Center (Mr Cowan), University of California, San Francisco Medical Center.

Abstract

We reviewed the course of 1,076 patients with essential hypertension whose condition had been initially evaluated with both ambulatory BP (ABP) and office BP (OBP) measurements. During the period of follow-up (mean, five years), fatal cardiovascular events occurred in 75 patients, and nonfatal events occurred in 153. Each patient was classified according to the difference between the mean observed ABP at entry and that predicted from the mean OBP at entry by means of an equation for the linear regression of ABP on OBP. Life-table analyses demonstrated a significantly greater estimated cumulative ten-year incidence of both fatal and nonfatal events among patients with higher than predicted ABPs than among those with lower than predicted ABPs. Because OBPs were comparable in the two groups, we conclude that ABP was an important determinant of clinical outcome.

(JAMA 1983;249:2792-2798)

Footnotes

  • Reprint requests to Moffitt Hospital 574, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143 (Dr Perloff).

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