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Title: A novel approach to office blood pressure measurement: 30-minute office blood pressure vs daytime ambulatory blood pressure
Author(s): Wel, M.C. van der (314339175)
Buunk, I.E.
Weel, C. van (068508999)
Thien, Th. (068468008)
Bakx, J.C. (073938378)
Publication year: 2011
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Annals of Family Medicine
ISSN: 1544-1709
Volume: vol. 9
Issue: iss. 2
Start page: p. 128
End page: p. 135
Annotation: van der Wel, Mark C Buunk, Iris E van Weel, Chris Thien, Theo A B M Bakx, J Carel Comparative Study Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Validation Studies United States Ann Fam Med. 2011 Mar-Apr;9(2):128-35.
Abstract: PURPOSE: Current office blood pressure measurement (OBPM) is often not executed according to guidelines and cannot prevent the white-coat effect. Serial, automated, oscillometric OBPM has the potential to overcome both these problems. We therefore developed a 30-minute OBPM method that we compared with daytime ambulatory blood pressure. METHODS: Patients referred to a primary care diagnostic center for 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) had their blood pressure measured using the same validated ABPM device for both ABPM and 30-minute OBPMs. During 30-minute OBPM, blood pressure was measured automatically every 5 minutes with the patient sitting alone in a quiet room. The mean 30-minute OBPM (based on t = 5 to t = 30 minutes) was compared with mean daytime ABPM using paired t tests and the approach described by Bland and Altman on method comparison. RESULTS: We analyzed data from 84 patients (mean age 57 years; 61% female). Systolic and diastolic blood pressures differed from 0 to 2 mm Hg (95% confidence interval, -2 to 2 mm Hg and from 0 to 3 mm Hg) between mean 30-minute OBPM and daytime ABPM, respectively. The limits of agreement were between -19 and 19 mm Hg for systolic and -10 and 13 mm Hg for diastolic blood pressures. Both 30-minute OBPM and daytime ABPM classified normotension, white-coat hypertension, masked hypertension, and sustained hypertension equally. CONCLUSIONS: The 30-minute OBPM appears to agree well with daytime ABPM and has the potential to detect white-coat and masked hypertension. This finding makes 30-minute OBPM a promising new method to determine blood pressure during diagnosis and follow-up of patients with elevated blood pressures.
Subject: NCEBP 7: Effective primary care and public health
Organization: Primary Healthcare
UMCN Extern
General Internal Medicine
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/97584

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