Ambulatory blood pressure measurement in the diagnosis and management of hypertension.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalJournal of human hypertension
Year 1991
Before the diagnostic potential of 24-hour non-invasive BP measurement can be assessed, the accuracy of ambulatory recorders must be established, and normal reference values determined. The accuracy criteria of four ambulatory BP measuring systems (the SpaceLabs 90207, the Novecor DIASYS 200, the Takeda TM-2420 and the Del Mar Avionics Pressurometer IV) have been assessed according to the British Hypertension Society (BHS) protocol, and the Medilog, Suntech Accutracker II and the SpaceLabs 90202 according to the standard of the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation (AAMI). The SpaceLabs 90202 and 90207, the DIASYS 200 and the Medilog fulfilled the AAMI criteria. The best devices with the BHS grading system are the SpaceLabs 90207 and the DIASYS 200. Normal reference values for daytime, night-time and 24-hour ambulatory BP have been provided by the Allied Irish Bank study of 815 healthy individuals, which showed clear age and sex differences. The mean 24-hour ambulatory pressure for the entire group was 118/72 mm Hg. 24-hour ambulatory BP measurement possesses clear advantages over conventional clinic measurement in evaluating drug efficacy, as it provides many more readings, allowing for the possibility of reducing the number of patients in antihypertensive drug studies and eliminating the need for a placebo-controlled crossover design. It allows assessment of night-time BP, which is important in view of the fact that excessive BP reduction may put patients at risk of myocardial infarction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Epistemonikos ID: 020b9ce3834525a834aebd3e8dfcd41047cb5cf0
First added on: Sep 26, 2023