Individual assessment of antihypertensive response by self-starting cumulative sums.

A self-interpreted control chart, on an individualized basis, assesses the effect of a switch from beta-blockers to an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitor in a patient with occasional blood pressure (BP) excess. In dense and long data series, the BP and heart rate (HR) of this patient respond to the change in treatment by the test criterion of a self-starting Cumulative Sum (cusum), which reaches values outside a decision interval with a lowering of BP and an increase in HR and vice versa, at least for BP, after treatment cessation. Thereafter, minimal sampling requirements are sought in the same data by applying the same control chart approach to decimated data. Skeleton sampling schemes in a system of chronobiologic self-analysis and interpretation of manually recorded data obtained at strategically placed times (established on the basis of data decimations) could complement control charts that are used on a home computer or preferably would be built into the output of ambulatory monitors used at the outset as a minimum and routinely as an optimum.

[1]  A. Ahlgren,et al.  Circadian systolic and diastolic hyperbaric indices of high school and college students. , 1984, Chronobiologia.

[2]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  Predictive Value of Blood Pressure Dipping and Swinging with Regard to Vascular Disease Risk , 1996 .

[3]  David B. Matchar,et al.  Clinical Assessment of Stroke , 1994 .

[4]  G. Lipkin,et al.  Ambulatory blood pressure and left ventricular mass in cyclosporin- and non-cyclosporin-treated renal transplant recipients , 1993, Journal of hypertension.

[5]  R. Esper,et al.  Left ventricular mass regression and diastolic function improvement in mild and moderate hypertensive patients treated with lisinopril. , 1993, Cardiology.

[6]  D. Mangano Perioperative Cardiac Morbidity , 1990 .

[7]  J. Drayer,et al.  Repetitive Blood Pressure Measurements: Clinical Issues, Techniques, and Data Analysis , 1987 .

[8]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  Impeachment of Casual Blood Pressure Measurements and the Fixed Limits for Their Interpretation and Chronobiologic Recommendations a , 1996, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[9]  A. Stanton,et al.  Antihypertensive therapy and circadian blood pressure profiles: a retrospective analysis utilising cumulative sums. , 1993, Blood pressure.

[10]  J Holton,et al.  Cusum plotting of temperature charts for assessing antimicrobial treatment in neutropenic patients. , 1989, BMJ.

[11]  S. Sheps,et al.  Antihypertensive efficacy of lisinopril. Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring. , 1988, American journal of hypertension.

[12]  An evaluation of cusum analysis in asthma. , 1980, British journal of diseases of the chest.

[13]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  Chronobiologic perspective of international health care reform for the future of children. , 1993, Chronobiologia.

[14]  J. Kostis Beta-blocker duration of action and implications for therapy. , 1990, The American journal of cardiology.

[15]  D. Vere,et al.  Why don't doctors use cusums? , 1974, Lancet.

[16]  Y. Imai,et al.  The influence of antihypertensive agents on circadian rhythms of blood pressure and heart rate in patients with essential hypertension. , 1992, The Tohoku journal of experimental medicine.

[17]  G. Griffin,et al.  Resolution of fever in Staphylococcus aureus septicaemia--retrospective analysis by means of Cusum plot. , 1986, The Journal of infection.

[18]  J. Williamson,et al.  Letter: Cusum charts. , 1974, Lancet.

[19]  A. Stanton,et al.  Cumulative sums in quantifying circadian blood pressure patterns. , 1992, Hypertension.

[20]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  A response to the health care crisis: a 'health start' from 'womb to tomb'. , 1993, Chronobiologia.

[21]  V. Canzanello,et al.  Current role of automated ambulatory blood pressure and self-measured blood pressure determinations in clinical practice. , 1994, Mayo Clinic proceedings.

[22]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  Chronopharmacologic Issues in Space , 1994, Journal of clinical pharmacology.

[23]  D. Aeppli,et al.  Detection of longitudinal change in periodontitis. , 1989, Journal of periodontal research.

[24]  H. Wohl The cusum plot: its utility in the analysis of clinical data. , 1977, The New England journal of medicine.

[25]  G. Cornelissen,et al.  Clinical trials: the larger the better? , 1993, Chronobiologia.

[26]  F. Portaluppi,et al.  Chronobiologic vs. sphygmomanometric assessment of hypertension in a hospital setting , 1989, Clinical cardiology.

[27]  W. Hall Hypertension in the elderly with a special focus on treatment with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and calcium antagonists. , 1992, The American journal of cardiology.

[28]  M. Moser Controversies in the management of hypertension. , 1990, American family physician.

[29]  G. Cornélissen,et al.  Chronobiologic blood pressure assessment with a cardiovascular summary, the sphygmochron , 1990 .

[30]  F Halberg,et al.  Cardiovascular reference data base for recognizing circadian mesor- and amplitude-hypertension in apparently healthy men. , 1984, Chronobiologia.

[31]  E. O’Brien,et al.  Application of cusums to ambulatory blood pressure data: a simple statistical technique for detecting trends over time. , 1989, Journal of hypertension.

[32]  Douglas M. Hawkins CUMULATIVE SUM CONTROL CHARTING: AN UNDERUTILIZED SPC TOOL , 1993 .

[33]  F. Portaluppi,et al.  Are we overtreating hypertensive patients? Chronobiologic vs. sphygmomanometric evaluation of ambulatory antihypertensive therapy. , 1990, Japanese heart journal.

[34]  D. Hawkins Self‐Starting Cusum Charts for Location and Scale , 1987 .