Intra-individual variability in postural blood pressure in the elderly

L. A. Lipsitz, H. A. Storch, K. L. Minaker, J. W. Rowe

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

90 Scopus citations

Abstract

1. Orthostatic hypotension, an age-related phenomenon, has been associated with hypertension and body weight variability. To evaluate the relative contributions of blood pressure elevation and abnormalities in extracellular volume regulation to orthostatic hypotension, elderly institutionalized subjects (mean age = 87 ± 7 years), taking no cardiovascular medications, underwent measurement of body weight (n=15) and first morning supine and standing blood pressures (n=19), 12-13 times per subject over a 2-4 week period. 2. There was a wide day-to-day variability in postural systolic blood pressure change (coefficient of variation = 533%) and a strong negative correlation between each day's postural change in systolic blood pressure and basal supine blood pressure (r= -0.55, P<0.0001). 3. There was no association between postural blood pressure change and heart rate response or body weight changes, which were very small over the duration of the study (coefficient of variation = 0.6%). 4. Elderly individuals have intact homoeostatic mechanisms for the control of standing pressure when basal blood pressure is normal. Postural hypotension in the elderly is a variable phenomenon related to elevations in basal blood pressure.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)337-341
Number of pages5
JournalClinical Science
Volume69
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1985
Externally publishedYes

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