Blood pressure response to the daily stressors of urban environments: Methodology, basic concepts, and significance

Blood pressure is studied in epidemiological and anthropological research as if each person has a single unique value. However, blood pressure is a fluctuating physiological function with significant intraday variability. This paper discusses and describes the methodology and basic concepts of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring as it has been employed to assess blood pressure variability in the continuously changing microenvironments of Western urban settings. Across urban microenvironments, blood pressures, on average, are highest while people are at work and are lowest during sleep. Blood pressure is further affected by emotional state and activity (which differ between men and women), the season of the year (winter and summer), and occupation. Differences in daily blood pressure variation also occur between ethnic groups (black versus white). The review also considers whether salt intake and other behavioral factors affect daily blood pressure variation. Finally, the review explores the use of ambulatory pressure monitoring for genetic studies. Before we can conclude that a varying physiological function like blood pressure helps individuals to adapt to changing daily environments, blood pressure must be studied under all daily conditions. If future human populations must adapt to the urban environment, then ambulatory blood pressure technology may be one tool that physical anthropologists can use to elucidate the direction of human evolution.

[1]  Schwartz Ba Letter: Ondine's curse. , 1976 .

[2]  J. Laragh,et al.  How common is white coat hypertension? , 1988, JAMA.

[3]  J. Bonventre,et al.  Sodium homeostasis: steady states without a set point. , 1982, Kidney international.

[4]  T. Pickering Can ambulatory blood pressure monitoring improve the diagnosis of mild hypertension? , 1990, Journal of hypertension. Supplement : official journal of the International Society of Hypertension.

[5]  L Denby,et al.  A quantitative analysis of the effects of activity and time of day on the diurnal variations of blood pressure. , 1987, Journal of chronic diseases.

[6]  D. Pregibon,et al.  Data Analysis of Ambulatory Blood Pressure Readings , 1989 .

[7]  J. Laragh,et al.  Parity and perceived job stress elevate blood pressure in young normotensive working women. , 1989, American journal of hypertension.

[8]  L. V. Egeren,et al.  A Computer-assisted Diary (CAD) for Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring , 1988 .

[9]  B. Waeber,et al.  Ambulatory blood pressure recordings. Reproducibility and unpredictability. , 1984, Hypertension.

[10]  W. Whitehead,et al.  Anxiety and anger in hypertension. , 1977, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[11]  R. Siervogel Genetic and familial factors in essential hypertension and related traits , 1983 .

[12]  T. Pickering,et al.  Research Techniques for Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring , 1989 .

[13]  W. White Assessment of patients with office hypertension by 24-hour noninvasive ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. , 1986, Archives of internal medicine.

[14]  T. Pickering,et al.  Blood pressure variability and reactivity in the natural environment , 1990 .

[15]  G. Ironson,et al.  Diaries in Ambulatory Monitoring , 1989 .

[16]  J. Drayer,et al.  Reproducibility of the whole-day blood pressure pattern in essential hypertension. , 1982, Clinical and experimental hypertension. Part A, Theory and practice.

[17]  R. Collins,et al.  Blood pressure, stroke, and coronary heart disease Part 1, prolonged differences in blood pressure: prospective observational studies corrected for the regression dilution bias , 1990, The Lancet.

[18]  H. Kennedy,et al.  Relationship between mood and blood pressure in the natural environment: an adolescent population. , 1986, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[19]  Data Analysis of Ambulatory Blood Pressure Readings Before p Values , 1989 .

[20]  H. Frost Hypertension and Longevity , 1925 .

[21]  L. Rowell Human Circulation: Regulation During Physical Stress , 1986 .

[22]  M. Reiser,et al.  Comparison of Blood Pressure Response to Veriloid and to the Doctor , 1954, Psychosomatic medicine.

[23]  J. Laragh,et al.  The reproducibility of average ambulatory, home, and clinic pressures. , 1988, Hypertension.

[24]  B. Winterhalder,et al.  An anthropological approach to human ecology and adaptive dynamics , 1979 .

[25]  T. Pickering,et al.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: assessing the diurnal variation of blood pressure. , 1991, American journal of physical anthropology.

[26]  Bevan At,et al.  Direct arterial pressure recording in unrestricted man. , 1969 .

[27]  J. Laragh,et al.  Situational Variations of Blood Pressure in Ambulatory Hypertensive Patients , 1982, Psychosomatic medicine.

[28]  R. Gillum,et al.  The Minneapolis children's blood pressure study. Part 1: standards of measurement for children's blood pressure. , 1980, Hypertension.

[29]  W. White,et al.  Clinical evaluation of the Colin ABPM 630 at rest and during exercise: an ambulatory blood pressure monitor with gas-powered cuff inflation. , 1989, Journal of hypertension.

[30]  S G Blank,et al.  The influence of happiness, anger, and anxiety on the blood pressure of borderline hypertensives. , 1986, Psychosomatic medicine.

[31]  H. Vetter,et al.  Twenty-four-hour blood pressure is not dependent on endogenous circadian rhythm. , 1989, Journal of hypertension.

[32]  G Parati,et al.  Alerting reaction and rise in blood pressure during measurement by physician and nurse. , 1987, Hypertension.

[33]  W. Kannel,et al.  Problems in the assessment of blood pressure: the Framingham Study. , 1976, International journal of epidemiology.

[34]  G. Scally Intersalt: an international study of electrolyte excretion and blood pressure. Results for 24 hour urinary sodium and potassium excretion. Intersalt Cooperative Research Group. , 1988, BMJ.

[35]  H. Selye The Stress of Life , 1958 .

[36]  A. Coats,et al.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: validation of the accuracy and reliability of the TM-2420 according to the AAMI recommendations. , 1991, Journal of human hypertension.

[37]  A. Leaf,et al.  Evidence that renal sodium excretion by normal human subjects is regulated by adrenal cortical activity. , 1949, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[38]  I. Waldron,et al.  Cross-cultural variation in blood pressure: a quantitative analysis of the relationships of blood pressure to cultural characteristics, salt consumption and body weight. , 1982, Social science & medicine.

[39]  N. Hollenberg Set point for sodium homeostasis: surfeit, deficit, and their implications. , 1980, Kidney international.

[40]  J. Cassel,et al.  Psychosocial factors in essential hypertension. Recent epidemiologic and animal experimental evidence. , 1969, American journal of epidemiology.

[41]  E. O'Brien,et al.  Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: a review of validation data. , 1990, Journal of hypertension. Supplement : official journal of the International Society of Hypertension.

[42]  N. Schneiderman,et al.  Posture, place, and mood effects on ambulatory blood pressure. , 1990, Psychophysiology.

[43]  W. White,et al.  Clinical validation of the accutracker, a novel ambulatory blood pressure monitor using R-wave gating for Korotkoff sounds. , 1987, Journal of clinical hypertension.

[44]  P. White,et al.  TRANSIENT HYPERTENSION: ITS SIGNIFICANCE IN TERMS OF LATER DEVELOPMENT OF SUSTAINED HYPERTENSION AND CARDIOVASCULAR-RENAL DISEASES , 1944 .

[45]  A. R. Frisancho Human adaptation: A functional interpretation , 1979 .

[46]  T. Pickering,et al.  Sex differences in factors affecting the daily variation of blood pressure. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[47]  M. Sokolow,et al.  Preliminary studies relating portably recorded blood pressures to daily life events in patients with essential hypertension. , 1970, Bibliotheca psychiatrica.

[48]  A. Dornhorst,et al.  Respiratory Variations in Blood Pressure , 1952, Circulation.

[49]  Thomas G. Pickering,et al.  The Measurement of Blood Pressure , 1989 .

[50]  J. Laragh,et al.  What is the role of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in the management of hypertensive patients? , 1985, Hypertension.

[51]  Harrison Ga Biosocial aspects of life in Britain. The effects of modern living. , 1973 .

[52]  T. Pickering,et al.  A comparison of two ambulatory blood pressure monitors, the Del Mar Avionics Pressurometer IV and the Spacelabs 90202. , 1989, American journal of hypertension.

[53]  L. V. Van Egeren,et al.  Ambulatory monitoring to assess real‐life cardiovascular reactivity in Type A and Type B subjects. , 1990, Psychosomatic medicine.

[54]  R. Devereux,et al.  Prediction of cardiovascular morbidity from ambulatory blood pressure monitoring , 1990 .

[55]  G. Harshfield,et al.  Circadian variation of blood pressure in blacks: influence of age, gender and activity. , 1990, Journal of human hypertension.

[56]  A. Gordin,et al.  Rapid reversal of circadian blood pressure rhythm in shift workers. , 1988, Journal of hypertension.

[57]  L. Irving Human Adaptation to Cold , 1960, Nature.

[58]  G. A. Rose,et al.  The variability of measurements of casual blood pressure. I. A laboratory study. , 1966, Clinical science.

[59]  T. Ogihara,et al.  The seasonal variation of blood pressure in patients with essential hypertension. , 1982, Clinical and experimental hypertension. Part A, Theory and practice.

[60]  S P Cooper,et al.  Training and certification of blood pressure observers. , 1983, Hypertension.

[61]  M. Konner,et al.  Stone agers in the fast lane: chronic degenerative diseases in evolutionary perspective. , 1988, The American journal of medicine.

[62]  B. T. Engel,et al.  Behavioral Treatment of High Blood Pressure. I. Analyses of Intra‐ and Interdaily Variations of Blood Pressure During A One‐Month, Baseline Period , 1981, Psychosomatic medicine.

[63]  M. Knapp,et al.  CIRCADIAN VARIATION IN BLOOD-PRESSURE , 1978, The Lancet.

[64]  T. Pickering,et al.  Some implications of the differences between home, clinic and ambulatory blood pressure in normotensive and hypertensive patients. , 1989, Journal of hypertension. Supplement : official journal of the International Society of Hypertension.

[65]  J. Henry Stress, salt and hypertension. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[66]  D. Ayman,et al.  BLOOD PRESSURE DETERMINATIONS BY PATIENTS WITH ESSENTIAL HYPERTENSION: I. The Difference Between Clinic and Home Readings Before Treatment , 1940 .

[67]  Emilio F. Moran,et al.  Human Adaptability: An Introduction to Ecological Anthropology , 1979 .

[68]  W. Rogers Transient Nervous Hypertension as a Military Risk , 1944 .

[69]  R. Sivertsson,et al.  Blood pressure and heart rate recordings at home and at the clinic. Evidence for increased cardiovascular reactivity in young men with mild blood pressure elevation. , 2009, Acta medica Scandinavica.

[70]  J. Laragh,et al.  Blood pressure during normal daily activities, sleep, and exercise. Comparison of values in normal and hypertensive subjects. , 1982, JAMA.

[71]  Giuseppe Mancia,et al.  EFFECTS OF BLOOD-PRESSURE MEASUREMENT BY THE DOCTOR ON PATIENT'S BLOOD PRESSURE AND HEART RATE , 1983, The Lancet.

[72]  G. Rose Seasonal Variation in Blood Pressure in Man , 1961, Nature.

[73]  G. Somes,et al.  Race and Gender Influence Ambulatory Blood Pressure Patterns of Adolescents , 1989, Hypertension.

[74]  T. Pickering,et al.  Do laboratory tests of blood pressure reactivity predict blood pressure changes during everyday life? , 1988, American journal of hypertension.

[75]  R. Ward Familial aggregation and genetic epidemiology of blood pressure , 1990 .

[76]  W. L. Ooi,et al.  Blood pressure reactivity predicts myocardial infarction among treated hypertensive patients. , 1990, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[77]  Clyde B. Schechter,et al.  Ambulatory monitoring and blood pressure variability , 1990 .

[78]  A. Swedlund,et al.  Biocultural perspectives on stress in prehistoric, historical, and contemporary population research , 1988 .

[79]  S. Reichlin Society, stress and disease, vol. 1: The psychosocial environment and psychosomatic diseases: edited by Lennard Levi, Oxford University Press, New York, 1971. 485 pp. $10.50. , 1974 .

[80]  J. Laragh,et al.  Characterization of Auscultatory Gaps With Wideband External Pulse Recording , 1991, Hypertension.

[81]  L. Hinkle Stress and disease: the concept after 50 years. , 1987, Social science & medicine.

[82]  E. O’Brien,et al.  Reproducibility of ambulatory blood pressure recordings , 1984 .

[83]  R. Watson,et al.  Cardiovascular Response in Black and White Hypertensives , 1982, Hypertension.

[84]  M. O'Rourke What is blood pressure , 1990 .

[85]  D. Crews,et al.  Ethnicity as a taxonomic tool in biomedical and biosocial research. , 1991, Ethnicity & disease.

[86]  B. Garrett,et al.  Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring: a question for now and the future. , 1987, The Journal of Clinical Hypertension.

[87]  H. Kennedy,et al.  Do borderline hypertensive patients have labile blood pressure? , 1981, Annals of internal medicine.

[88]  F. Simpson SODIUM INTAKE, BODY SODIUM, AND SODIUM EXCRETION , 1988, The Lancet.

[89]  W. Elliott,et al.  Evaluation of the Suntech Accutracker. A novel noninvasive ambulatory blood pressure monitor. , 1988, American journal of hypertension.

[90]  M. Alderman,et al.  Labelling of hypertensives: a review of the data. , 1990, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[91]  T. Pickering,et al.  The effect of work environments on blood pressure: evidence from seven New York organizations. , 1990, Journal of hypertension.

[92]  D. Falconer,et al.  Introduction to Quantitative Genetics. , 1962 .

[93]  W. White,et al.  Clinical evaluation of the Accutracker II ambulatory blood pressure monitor: assessment of performance in two countries and comparison with sphygmomanometry and intra-arterial blood pressure at rest and during exercise , 1989, Journal of hypertension.

[94]  R. Rosenman,et al.  The Interview Method of Assessment of the Coronary-Prone Behavior Pattern , 1978 .

[95]  N. Schneiderman,et al.  How many blood pressure measurements are enough? An application of generalizability theory to the study of blood pressure reliability. , 1988, Psychophysiology.

[96]  C. Weitz Blood pressure at rest and during exercise among Sherpas and Tibetan migrants in Nepal. , 1982, Social science & medicine.

[97]  G. Rose,et al.  STANDARDISATION OF OBSERVERS IN BLOOD-PRESSURE MEASUREMENT. , 1965, Lancet.

[98]  W. White,et al.  Average daily blood pressure, not office blood pressure, determines cardiac function in patients with hypertension. , 1989, JAMA.

[99]  A. G. Shaper,et al.  Observer bias in blood pressure studies. , 1988, Journal of hypertension.

[100]  M Marmot,et al.  INTERSALT Study Findings Public Health and Medical Care Implications , 1989, Hypertension.

[101]  T. Pickering,et al.  Hypertension in blacks: psychosocial and biological perspectives. , 1989, Journal of hypertension.

[102]  R. Carey,et al.  The Charlottesville Blood-Pressure Survey. Value of repeated blood-pressure measurements. , 1976, JAMA.

[103]  W. White,et al.  A multicenter evaluation of the A&D TM-2420 ambulatory blood pressure recorder. , 1991, American journal of hypertension.

[104]  C. Pieper,et al.  The role of behavioral factors in white coat and sustained hypertension. , 1990, Journal of hypertension. Supplement : official journal of the International Society of Hypertension.

[105]  S. Kjeldsen,et al.  119 Does awareness of hypertension per se influence blood pressure, heart rate, plasma catecholamines and response to cold pressor test? , 1988 .

[106]  T. A. Anderson,et al.  The effect of dietary sodium chloride on blood pressure, body fluids, electrolytes, renal function, and serum lipids of normotensive man. , 1976, The Journal of laboratory and clinical medicine.

[107]  E. Raftery,et al.  Ambulant blood pressure: reproducibility and the assessment of interventions. , 1980, Clinical science.

[108]  G. A. Rose,et al.  The variability of measurements of casual blood pressure. II. Survey experience. , 1966, Clinical science.

[109]  G. Harshfield,et al.  A validation study of the Del Mar Avionics Pressurometer IV according to AAMI guidelines. , 1988, Journal of hypertension.

[110]  G. James,et al.  Variation in lifestyle characteristics and catecholamine excretion rates among young Western Samoan men. , 1987, Social science & medicine.

[111]  G. James,et al.  Race and perceived stress independently affect the diurnal variation of blood pressure in women. , 1991, American journal of hypertension.

[112]  T. Pickering,et al.  Winter-summer differences in the effects of emotion, posture and place of measurement on blood pressure. , 1990, Social science & medicine.

[113]  Jeremiah Stamler,et al.  Intersalt: an international study of electrolyte excretion and blood pressure. Results for 24 hour urinary sodium and potassium excretion. Intersalt Cooperative Research Group. , 1988 .

[114]  M. Sokolow,et al.  The prognostic value of ambulatory blood pressures. , 1983, JAMA.

[115]  G. Chatellier,et al.  Evaluation of the Spacelabs Ambulatory Blood Pressure Recorder: Comparison with the Remler M2000 , 1986 .

[116]  J. Laragh,et al.  Dietary Salt and Blood Pressure A Perspective , 1991, Hypertension.