Manual and automated office measurements in relation to awake ambulatory blood pressure monitoring.

Fam Pract

Department of Family Medicine, Primary Healthcare Research Unit, Memorial University of Newfoundland, 300 Prince Philip Drive, St John's, Newfoundland, Canada.

Published: February 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Automated blood pressure (BP) devices, particularly the BpTRU, provide more accurate predictions of ambulatory BP compared to traditional manual measurements, with a single automated reading showing higher positive predictive values.
  • In a study of 654 patients, automated BP assessments were found to have a maximum overall accuracy of 74% for systolic BP at the 130 mmHg cut-point, significantly outperforming manual readings.
  • The study suggests maintaining the 135/85 mmHg cut-point for high BP while indicating that further research could refine this range using ambulatory BP monitoring for better accuracy.

Article Abstract

Background: Automated blood pressure (BP) devices are commonly used in doctor's offices. How BP measured on these devices relates to ambulatory BP monitoring is not clear.

Objective: To assess how well office-based manual and automated BP predicts ambulatory BP.

Methods: Using data on 654 patients, we assessed how well sphygmomanometer measurements and measurements taken with an automated device (BpTRU) predicted results on ambulatory BP monitoring. We assess positive and negative predictive values and overall accuracy. We look at different cut-points for systolic (130, 135 and 140 mmHg) and diastolic (80, 85 and 90 mmHg) BP.

Results: A single automated office BP (AOBP) assessment provides superior predictive values and overall accuracy compared to three manual office BP assessments. For systolic BP, the predictive values are ≤69% for any of the cut-points while the positive predictive values for the single automated measurement is between 80.0% and 86.9% and the overall accuracy gets as high as 74% for the 130 mmHg cut-point. For diastolic BP, the automated readings are also more predictive but in this case, it is the negative predictive values that are better, as well as the overall accuracy.

Conclusions: Based on the results, we suggest that 135/85 mmHg continue to be used as the cut-point defining high BP with the BpTRU device. However, future research might suggests that values in a grey zone between 130-139 mmHg systolic and 80-89 mmHg diastolic be confirmed using ambulatory BP monitoring. As well, three AOBP assessments might produce much greater accuracy than the single AOBP assessment used in the study.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/fampra/cmq067DOI Listing

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