Title of article :
Factors associated with the occurrence and magnitude of earthquake-induced increases in blood pressure
Author/Authors :
Kazuomi Kario، نويسنده , , Takefumi Matsuo MD، نويسنده , , Kazuyuki Shimada، نويسنده , , Thomas G. Pickering، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Abstract :
Background
Blood pressure increases transiently after a major earthquake, but the characteristics and the mechanism of this increase are unknown.
Methods
The study involved 124 elderly hypertensive outpatients from two clinics near the epicenter of the Hanshin-Awaji earthquake (7.2 on the Richter scale) for whom ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and assessment of end-organ damage had been performed before the earthquake.
Results
During the 1 to 2 weeks after the earthquake, while major aftershocks persisted, mean (± SD) systolic blood pressure was 14 ± 16 mm Hg greater and mean diastolic blood pressure was 6 ± 10 mm Hg greater, but these values returned to baseline by 3 to 5 weeks after the earthquake. The earthquake-induced increase in blood pressure correlated significantly with the “white coat” effect ([clinic systolic blood pressure minus 24-hour systolic blood pressure] r = 0.34, P<0.001), body mass index (r = 0.28, P<0.001), and age (r = 0.24, P<0.01). The earthquake-induced blood pressure increase was prolonged in patients with microalbuminuria for at least 2 months after the earthquake, whereas it was less pronounced in patients who had been treated with an alpha-blocker and in patients with diabetes mellitus.
Conclusions
These elderly patients with hypertension had a substantial increase in blood pressure after a major earthquake; the increase was usually transient, except in patients who had microalbuminuria. The correlation with white-coat hypertension suggests that both phenomena are related to sympathetic activation.
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine
Journal title :
The American Journal of Medicine