Association between white-coat effect and blunted dipping of nocturnal blood pressure

Am J Hypertens. 2009 Oct;22(10):1054-61. doi: 10.1038/ajh.2009.133. Epub 2009 Jul 23.

Abstract

Background: In this study, we assessed whether the white-coat effect (difference between office and daytime blood pressure (BP)) is associated with nondipping (absence of BP decrease at night).

Methods: Data were available in 371 individuals of African descent from 74 families selected from a population-based hypertension register in the Seychelles Islands and in 295 Caucasian individuals randomly selected from a population-based study in Switzerland. We used standard multiple linear regression in the Swiss data and generalized estimating equations to account for familial correlations in the Seychelles data.

Results: The prevalence of systolic and diastolic nondipping (<10% nocturnal BP decrease) and white-coat hypertension (WCH) was respectively 51, 46, and 4% in blacks and 33, 37, and 7% in whites. When white coat effect and nocturnal dipping were taken as continuous variables (mm Hg), systolic (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) dipping were associated inversely and independently with white-coat effect (P < 0.05) in both populations. Analogously, the difference between office and daytime heart rate was inversely associated with the difference between daytime and night-time heart rate in the two populations. These results did not change after adjustment for potential confounders.

Conclusions: The white-coat effect is associated with BP nondipping. The similar associations between office-daytime values and daytime-night-time values for both BP and heart rate suggest that the sympathetic nervous system might play a role. Our findings also further stress the interest, for clinicians, of assessing the presence of a white-coat effect as a means to further identify patients at increased cardiovascular risk and guide treatment accordingly.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Anxiety / ethnology
  • Blood Pressure Determination
  • Blood Pressure*
  • Creatinine / urine
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hypertension / ethnology
  • Hypertension / physiopathology*
  • Hypertension / psychology
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Periodicity*
  • Potassium / urine
  • Seychelles / ethnology
  • Sodium / urine
  • Switzerland / ethnology
  • White People / ethnology

Substances

  • Sodium
  • Creatinine
  • Potassium