Blood pressure variability: a review.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
40084481
Description
Blood pressure variability (BPV) predicts cardiovascular events independent of mean blood pressure. BPV is defined as short-term (24-h), medium or long- term (weeks, months or years). Standard deviation, coefficient of variation and variation independent of the mean have been used to quantify BPV. High BPV is associated with increasing age, diabetes, smoking and vascular disease and is a consequence of premature ageing of the vasculature. Long-term BPV has been incorporated into cardiovascular risk models (QRISK) and elevated BPV confers an increased risk of cardiovascular outcomes even in subjects with controlled blood pressure. Long-acting dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers and thiazide diuretics are the only drugs that reduce BPV and for the former explains their beneficial effects on cardiovascular outcomes. We believe that BPV should be incorporated into blood pressure management guidelines and based on current evidence, long-acting dihydropyridines should be preferred drugs in subjects with elevated BPV.
Date of Publication
2025-06-01
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Kulkarni, Spoorthy | |
Parati, Gianfranco | |
Bangalore, Sripal | |
Bilo, Grzegorz | |
Kim, Bum Joon | |
Kario, Kazuomi | |
Stergiou, George | |
Wang, Jiguang | |
Whiteley, William | |
Wilkinson, Ian | |
Sever, Peter S |
Additional Credits
Series
Journal of Hypertension
Publisher
Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins
ISSN
1473-5598
0263-6352
Access(Rights)
open.access