Publication | Closed Access
Absence of Nocturnal Fall in Blood Pressure in Elderly Persons with Alzheimer‐Type Dementia
34
Citations
27
References
1990
Year
HypertensionAgingBlood Pressure VariabilityCircadian ChangesBlood PressureGeriatric NeurologyAlzheimer's DiseaseNeurologyAging-associated DiseaseCircadian RhythmHealth SciencesSleepGeriatricsVascular DementiaRehabilitationRisk FactorsDementiaPhysiologyAlzheimer‐type DementiaMedicineChronobiologyNocturnal Fall
Circadian changes of the blood pressure and heart rate in elderly normotensive bedridden patients with severe dementia of the Alzheimer type (group D) were compared with those in elderly normotensive bedridden patients without dementia (group R), normotensive subjects with normal daily activity (group N), and hypertensive patients with normal daily activity (group H). In groups R, N, and H, the blood pressure increased in the afternoon and decreased at midnight; in group D, however, although it increased in the afternoon, it did not decrease at night. The circadian changes of the heart rate were similar in all four groups, showing maxima in the afternoon and minima at midnight. Thus, a specific alteration was found in the circadian rhythm of the blood pressure in patients with Alzheimer-type dementia.
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