The purpose of this study was to calculate statistically the minimum (base) blood pressure (BP) of nighttime (sleep-time) BP values obtained by ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) and to investigate its clinical significance. Twenty-four-hour recording of ECG with ABPM was performed directly (n=89) or indirectly (n=117) in 206 patients with essential hypertension. A telemeter was used for the direct method and a multi-biomedical recorder (TM2425) was used for indirect measurement. First. minimum heart rate (HR0=60/RR0) was determined from sleep-time ECG. The mean product of sleep-time diastolic BP (DBP) and pulse interval (RR) was divided by RR, to obtain DBP, [DBP0=(DBPXRR)s/RR0]. The correlation between systolic BP (SBP) and DBP was used to determine SBP0 corresponding to DBP0. Statistical base mean BP (MBP0) was calculated from these values, and its reproducibility and relation to hypertension severity were investigated. MBP0 values were similar to true base values of sleep-time MBP obtained by the direct method (mean+/-SD difference, 2.0+/-4.2 mm Hg). Direct MBP0 criteria predicted hypertension severity (mild, moderate, or severe target organ damage) more accurately (predictive accuracy, 89%) than daytime MBP criteria (53%, P<0101). Almost the same results were obtained using indirect MBP0 criteria. Day-to-day indirect MBP0 variation (mean absolute difference) was smaller (2.4+/-1.8 mm Hg) than day-to-day daytime and nighttime MBP variation (6.3+/-5.3 and 5.4+/-3.4 mm Hg, respectively; n=61, P<0.01), and the correlation coefficient between day-to-day variations of daytime MBP and physical activity (measured by an acceleration sensor) was 0.38 (P<0.05). In conclusion, statistical base BP was almost equal to true base (minimum) BP of sleep-time BP distribution. It was closely related to the severity of hypertensive organ damage, was highly reproducible, and is considered likely to serve stochastically and physiologically as a representative BP value in an individual subject.