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Ambulatory blood pressures and autonomic nervous function in normoalbuminuric type I diabetic patients.
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1998
Year
IDDM patients with normal UAE, compared with healthy control subjects, have higher BPs during both the waking and sleeping periods and a decreased diastolic BP decline during sleep. In these patients both the diastolic BP decline and the heart rate decline during sleep were related to the max/min ratio. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that attenuation of diastolic BP decline during sleep is at least partly due to (incipient) damage to the parasympathetic nervous system, which, through a blunted heart rate decline, leads to a decreased decline of cardiac output during sleep.