AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research examined how posture (standing, moving, or seated) affects average daytime blood pressure during ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) in desk workers with mild hypertension.
  • The study found that individuals' blood pressure readings were significantly higher after standing or moving compared to after sitting, with substantial variability explained by their activity levels prior to measurements.
  • These findings suggest that posture and activity before blood pressure assessments can impact the diagnosis of hypertension, highlighting the need for standardized recommendations regarding seating during BP monitoring.

Article Abstract

Background There are no recommendations for being seated versus nonseated during ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring (ABPM). The authors examined how recent standing or moving versus sitting affect average daytime BP on ABPM. Methods and Results This analysis used baseline assessments from a clinical trial in desk workers with office systolic BP (SBP) 120 to 159 mm Hg or diastolic BP (DBP) 80 to 99 mm Hg. ABPM was measured every 30 minutes with a SunTech Medical Oscar 2 monitor. Concurrent posture (standing or seated) and moving (steps) were measured via a thigh-worn accelerometer. Linear regression determined within-person BP variability explained () by standing and steps before ABPM readings. Mean daytime BP and the prevalence of mean daytime BP >135/85 mm Hg from readings after sitting (seated) or after recent standing or moving (nonseated) were compared with all readings. Participants (n=266, 59% women; age, 45.2±11.6 years) provided 32.5±3.9 daytime BP readings. Time standing and steps before readings explained variability up to 17% for daytime SBP and 14% for daytime DBP. Using the 5-minute prior interval, seated SBP/DBP was lower (130.8/79.7 mm Hg, <0.001) and nonseated SBP/DBP was higher (137.8/84.3 mm Hg, <0.001) than mean daytime SBP/DBP from all readings (133.9/81.6 mm Hg). The prevalence of mean daytime SBP/DBP ≥135/85 mm Hg also differed: 38.7% from seated readings, 70.3% from nonseated readings, and 52.6% from all readings (<0.05). Conclusions Daytime BP was systematically higher after standing and moving compared with being seated. Individual variation in activity patterns could influence the diagnosis of high BP using daytime BP readings on ABPM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10547321PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.029999DOI Listing

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