• Title of article

    Ambulatory 24-h blood pressure monitoring in healthy, middle-aged smokeless tobacco users, smokers, and nontobacco users

  • Author/Authors

    Gunilla Bolinder، نويسنده , , Ulf de Faire، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    1153
  • To page
    1163
  • Abstract
    Ambulatory 24-h blood pressure monitoring was conducted in 135 healthy, normotensive, middle-aged (35 to 60 years) men, with no antihypertensive medication, to study the influence of habitual smokeless tobacco use (n = 47) and smoking (n = 29) on diurnal blood pressure and heart rate. Comparisons were made with nonusers of tobacco (n = 59). Adjustments were made for differences in age, body mass index, waist-hip ratio, physical fitness, and alcohol intake. Daytime ambulatory heart rates were significantly (P< .05) elevated in both smokeless tobacco users and smokers compared with nonusers (69 ± 14 and 74 ± 13 beats/min, respectively, versus 63 ± 12 beats/min). In subjects ≥ 45 years old, ambulatory daytime diastolic blood pressures were significantly elevated, on average by 5 mm Hg, in both smokeless tobacco users and smokers (P< .001) compared with nonusers. Clinical measurements of heart rate and systolic blood pressure in smokers were significantly lower compared with the ambulatory mean values. Nighttime measurements showed only minor differences between the tobacco habit groups. The higher heart rates and blood pressures noted during the daytime in smokers and smokeless tobacco users were most likely due to the effects of nicotine. A strong positive relationship was found between cotinine (major nicotine metabolite) and blood pressure in smokeless tobacco users (systolic blood pressure, r = 0.48, P< .001; diastolic blood pressure, r = 0.41, P= .005), whereas an inverse relationship was found in smokers (systolic blood pressure, r =−0.12, P= .47; diastolic blood pressure, r =−0.03, P= .84), indicating additional and more complex influences on vascular tone in smokers than the influence of nicotine in smokeless tobacco users.
  • Keywords
    nicotine. , ambulatory blood pressure , smoking , Smokeless tobacco
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Hypertension
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    American Journal of Hypertension
  • Record number

    646996