Smoking effect on the circadian rhythm of blood pressure in hypertensive subjects
Giulia Silveri, Lorenzo Pascazio, Aleksandar Miladinovic, Milos, Ajcevic, Agostino Accardo

TL;DR
This study investigates how cigarette smoking affects the 24-hour blood pressure circadian rhythm in hypertensive and normotensive subjects, revealing significant differences in BP patterns linked to smoking status.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of smoking's impact on blood pressure circadian rhythm, using Holter monitoring data in hypertensive and normotensive subjects excluding other risk factors.
Findings
Higher BP values in hypertensive smokers from 10:00 to 02:00.
Significant BP differences between smokers and non-smokers in certain periods.
Variations in BP change rates suggest different cardiovascular risk levels.
Abstract
The use of office measurement of Blood Pressure (BP) as well as of the mean on day-time, on night-time or on 24h does not accurately describe the changes of the BP circadian rhythm. Moreover, several risk factors affect this rhythm but until now possible alterations, due to the presence of such risk factors considered separately, were not been yet studied. Cigarette smoking is one of the most relevant risk factors increasing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study is to evaluate quantitatively and with a suitable temporal detail how the smoking influences the BP circadian rhythm in normotensive and hypertensive subjects excluding those who presented other risk factors like obesity, dyslipidemia and diabetes mellitus. Holter BP monitoring coming from 618 subjects was used and the behaviour on 24h was examined separately in normotensive and hypertensive subjects…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Cardiovascular Health and Disease Prevention · Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control
