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Resolution: standard / high Figure 29.
Changing amplitude of some components in a partial spectral element of the postnatal
human diastolic blood pressure chronome. Data from a healthy boy, born 19.10.1992,
whose blood pressure was measured at mostly 30-minute intervals from 20.10 for the
ensuing 40 days, and analyzed as a moving spectrum in separate weekly intervals, displaced
in 12-hour increments through the data set. An initially greater prominence of infradians,
shown by darker shading, corresponding to a larger amplitude, contrasts with the prominence
of circadians and circasemidians in later weeks of life, while any ultradians with
still higher frequencies and any trends and chaos, two other chronome elements, are
here unassessed. Gliding spectral window of amplitudes of diastolic blood pressure,
focusing on infradians and circadians (view from the top; surface chart) in the first
40 days of life of a boy born at term (FW). Prominence of the infradian spectral components
immediately after birth is apparent from shading [165,166]. The change in shading observed around November 5 is an artefact related to a gap
in the data collection. Original data of Yoshihiko Watanabe.
Halberg et al. Journal of Circadian Rhythms 2003 1:2 doi:10.1186/1740-3391-1-2 |