Applied Evidence

Avoiding missteps in BP measurement

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The takeaway

Accurate office BP measurement is essential for patient evaluation and provides the basis for critical decisions about diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of hypertensive disease. It is imperative to control for factors that may introduce error in BP determination by using a standard protocol and calibrated BP measurement equipment.

Both manual auscultatory and oscillometric methods of measurement are appropriate for office assessment, but oscillometric evaluation is inappropriate for patients with severe atherosclerotic disease, peripheral arterial disease (for ABI), or small arm circumference. If oscillometric BP measurement is performed in patients with atrial fibrillation, at least 3 repeated measurements should be done to improve accuracy. Automated oscillometric BP assessment that records multiple measurements in the quietly resting patient has been promoted to provide a more standardized BP measurement by reducing observer error and the “white coat” effect. Ambulatory oscillometric BP monitoring has been widely endorsed as the optimal method for BP measurement.

CORRESPONDENCE
Darrell R. Over, MD, MSc, FAAFP, 1601 West 40th Street, Pine Bluff, AR 71603; OverDarrellR@uams.edu

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