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Relationship of Clinic, Ambulatory, and Laboratory Stress Blood Pressure to Left Ventricular Mass in Overweight Men and Women With High Blood Pressure

Andrew Sherwood, PhD, Elizabeth C. D. Gullette, PhD, Alan L. Hinderliter, MD, Anastasia Georgiades, PhD, Michael Babyak, PhD, Robert A. Waugh, MD and James A. Blumenthal, PhD

From the Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (A.S., E.C.D.G., A.G., M.B., J.A.B.) and Medicine (R.A.W.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, and the Department of Medicine (A.L.H.), University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC.



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Fig. 1. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) in the clinic, during ambulatory monitoring, during stress, and during the "vasoconstrictive" stressors (aggregate of mirror trace and cold pressor) in subjects with LVH (N = 50) and with normal LVMI (N = 47), controlling for BMI. Statistical significance values for differences in SBP associated with each BP measurement condition are indicated as probability (p) values.

 





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