AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate how pediatric care responds to children with elevated blood pressure (BP) by assessing the timing of follow-up measurements and the likelihood of those children continuing to have high BP.
  • Out of over 72,000 children studied, only 8.4% experienced an incident of elevated BP, and only 20.9% had a follow-up measurement within a month.
  • Although most children did not get timely follow-up BP checks, very few (1.4%) continued to have consistently elevated BP within a year, indicating that most cases may not progress to hypertension.

Article Abstract

Background And Objective: Screening for hypertension in children occurs during routine care. When blood pressure (BP) is elevated in the hypertensive range, a repeat measurement within 1 to 2 weeks is recommended. The objective was to assess patterns of care after an incident elevated BP, including timing of repeat BP measurement and likelihood of persistently elevated BP.

Methods: This retrospective study was conducted in 3 health care organizations. All children aged 3 through 17 years with an incident elevated BP at an outpatient visit during 2007 through 2010 were identified. Within this group, we assessed the proportion who had a repeat BP measured within 1 month of their incident elevated BP and the proportion who subsequently met the definition of hypertension. Multivariate analyses were used to identify factors associated with follow-up BP within 1 month of initial elevated BP.

Results: Among 72,625 children and adolescents in the population, 6108 (8.4%) had an incident elevated BP during the study period. Among 6108 with an incident elevated BP, 20.9% had a repeat BP measured within 1 month. In multivariate analyses, having a follow-up BP within 1 month was not significantly more likely among individuals with obesity or stage 2 systolic elevation. Among 6108 individuals with an incident elevated BP, 84 (1.4%) had a second and third consecutive elevated BP within 12 months.

Conclusions: Whereas >8% of children and adolescents had an incident elevated BP, the great majority of BPs were not repeated within 1 month. However, relatively few individuals subsequently met the definition of hypertension.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3727670PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2012-2437DOI Listing

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