The morning blood pressure surge is related to serum cholesterol

Martin, CA; Chen, SS; Head, GA; Eikelis, N; Cameron, JD; McGrath, BP
Abstract
A morning blood pressure surge (MBPS) may be either a mechanism for, or a marker of, increased cardiovascular events. This study has examined factors which may influence the morning surge: age, gender, metabolic factors, sympathetic function, blood pressure and arterial stiffness. Four measures of the MBPS were examined--sleep-trough surge, pre-awake surge, rate of blood pressure rise and a Power function. Subjects underwent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, glucose tolerance test, central pulse wave velocity, sympathetic autonomic function tests (mental stress and sustained handgrip). MBPS was associated with age, hypertension, blood pressure variability and serum lipids. After adjustment for age and waist circumference, all four measures of MBPS remained positively associated with low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. The novel finding of a significant relationship between measures of MBPS and LDL-cholesterol is an intriguing link between two major cardiovascular risk factors.
Journal J HUM HYPERTENS
ISSN 0950-9240
Published 01 May 2013
Volume 27
Issue 5
Pages 315-20
DOI 10.1038/jhh.2012.44
Type Journal Article
Sponsorship
NHMRC: 1002186, 317826