Abstract
The aim of this cross-sectional study which took place in a hypertension clinic at a district general hospital in Denmark was to make a pragmatic definition of white coat hypertension. A total of 420 patients were referred consecutively from general practice with newly diagnosed untreated essential hypertension and 146 normal subjects were drawn at random from the Danish national register. The following measurements were taken: office blood pressure; 24-h ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring; echocardiography with determination of left ventricular mass index and relative wall thickness; and early morning urine albumin/creatinine ratios.
Four different cut-off levels were studied. An ambulatory daytime BP of 135.6/90.4 mm Hg was found to correspond to an office BP of 140/90 mm Hg in normal controls; used as a cut-off level in patients with newly diagnosed hypertension it separated 19% as white coat hypertensives. The end-organ involvement of these white coat hypertensives differed significantly from those with established hypertension but not from the normal controls. Lower cut-off levels were less efficient in this respect, as was the case when the systolic BP was not taken into account.
In conclusion a pragmatic definition of white coat hypertension should—apart from well-established hypertensive office measurements—include a cut-off level close to 135/90 mm Hg ambulatory daytime BP.
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Høegholm, A., Kristensen, K., Bang, L. et al. White coat hypertension and target organ involvement: the impact of different cut-off levels on albuminuria and left ventricular mass and geometry. J Hum Hypertens 12, 433–439 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jhh.1000654
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jhh.1000654
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