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Assessment of target-organ damage in adolescent white-coat and sustained hypertensives.

AIMS AND SCOPE: The aim of the present study was to assess whether a difference exists between intima-media thickness and the left ventricular mass index in healthy nonhypertensive, white-coat hypertensive and sustained hypertensive adolescents.

PATIENTS AND METHODS: Fifty-nine normotensive and 120 hypertensive adolescents were enrolled in our study. Hypertensive patients were classified into white-coat hypertension (WCH) and sustained hypertension groups based on 24-h ambulatory blood pressure measurements. Both normotensive and hypertensive individuals underwent routine laboratory tests, intima-media thickness measurements on the common carotid arteries and transthoracic echocardiography to measure the left ventricular mass index (LVMI).

RESULTS: Intima-media thickness was higher both in WCH and sustained hypertension compared with healthy normotensive individuals (controls: 0.048 ± 0.01 cm, WCH: 0.056 ± 0.01 cm, sustained hypertension: 0.054 ± 0.012 cm, both P < 0.001 compared with controls, nonsignificant difference between the two hypertensive groups). There was no difference between the LVMI of control individuals and WCH (LVMI: 35.5 ± 10.3 g/m and 37.7 ± 11.2 g/m respectively, P = 0.87). LVMI in sustained hypertension group (LVMI: 44.1 ± 14.1 g/m) was significantly higher both compared with WCH (P < 0.05), and healthy adolescents (P < 0.001).

CONCLUSION: Target-organ damage develops in a stepwise fashion in adolescent hypertension. An increased intima-media thickness can be demonstrated not only in the sustained but also in the white-coat form of adolescent hypertension.

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