“…Altered circadian BP 24 h patterning, that is, attenuated sleep-time decline and sleep-time riser profiles, often presenting as nocturnal hypertension, are common in persons diagnosed with diabetes , renal disease (Mojón et al, 2013), resistant hypertension -hypertension resistant to SBP/DBP reduction to normal values after treatment with three or more medications (Ríos et al, 2013) -and who are elderly, particularly those ≥60 years of age (Hermida et al, 2013a). According to Fabbian et al (2013), such BP patterns are highly prevalent also in persons with severe hypertension, salt-sensitive essential hypertension, neurogenic hypertension, essential hypertension with left ventricular hypertrophy, gestational hypertension, toxemia of pregnancy, orthostatic autonomic failure, Shy-Drager syndrome, vascular and Alzheimer-type dementia, cerebral atrophy, cardiovascular disease, ischemic arterial disease, congestive heart failure, carotid endarterectomy, fatal familial insomnia, catecholamine-producing tumors, Cushing's and mineral corticoid excess syndromes including from exogenous glucocorticoid administration, Addison's disease, pseudohypoparathyroidism, sleep apnea, normotensive and hypertensive asthma, plus those treated with immunosuppressive medication following renal, liver and cardiac transplantation, and those treated with recombinant human erythropoietin therapy.…”