RESUMO
Blood pressure is subject to considerable circadian and situational fluctuation. In 24-h blood-pressure monitoring the severity of arterial hypertension is generally classified on the basis of the arithmetic mean of the diastolic blood pressure between 07.00 and 22.00 hours. In the present study Fourier analysis was used to generate continuous functions from the discrete blood-pressure values measured during 24-h blood-pressure monitoring in a sample of 50 normotensive persons aged from 25 to 80 years. A common reference profile was then constructed from these 50 profiles. This reference profile is characterized by the fact that the sum of the integrals over the squares of the distances between the individual profiles and the reference profile is the smallest possible. The reference profile is thus the best approximation of all normotensive profiles and practically ignores individual blood pressure fluctuations. The individual 24-h profiles of 80 patients with untreated arterial hypertension were classified on the basis of the daytime mean as mild, moderate or severe arterial hypertension and also each is described by a Fourier series. The pathological profiles were then compared with the normotensive reference profile. The comparison was made, not only with respect to the absolute pressure over 24 h, but also with respect to the circadian fluctuations in blood pressure. Comparison of the profiles shows that the Fourier analysis of 24-h blood-pressure profiles presented here permits reliable analysis and classification of arterial hypertension and can thus be used for more precise evaluation of the influence of antihypertensives on 24-h blood-pressure profiles.