| Literature DB >> 19473485 |
Sakir Uen1, Rolf Fimmers, Miriam Brieger, Georg Nickenig, Thomas Mengden.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Wrist blood pressure (BP) devices have physiological limits with regards to accuracy, therefore they were not preferred for home BP monitoring. However some wrist devices have been successfully validated using established validation protocols. Therefore this study assessed the reproducibility of wrist home BP measurement with position sensor and automatic data storage.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19473485 PMCID: PMC2693493 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2261-9-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cardiovasc Disord ISSN: 1471-2261 Impact factor: 2.298
Patient characteristics
| Range | Mean | SD | |
| Age (years) | 19–74 | 52 | 12 |
| Height (cm) | 153–199 | 173 | 9 |
| Weight (kg) | 52–128 | 81 | 17 |
| BMI(kg/m2) | 19–43 | 27 | 5 |
| Left ventricular mass index (g/m2) | 53–189 | 101 | 27 |
| Left wrist circumference (cm) | 13.5–20 | 17 | 2 |
| Left upper arm circumference (cm) | 23–41 | 30 | 3 |
SD: Standard deviation
Blood pressure values obtained with the different methods for the two measurement periods
| Blood pressure (mmHg) | Mean | SD | Mean | SD |
| Office BP Day 1 | 148 | 24 | 92 | 13 |
| Office BP Day 7 | 144 | 21 | 90 | 12 |
| Home BP Week 1 | 135 | 16 | 84 | 12 |
| Home BP Week 2 | 134 | 16 | 83 | 12 |
| 24-h ABPM Day 7 | 131 | 15 | 79 | 11 |
| 24-h ABPM Day 14 | 133 | 16 | 80 | 11 |
| 24-h ABPM Daytime day 7 | 136 | 16 | 83 | 11 |
| 24-h ABPM Daytime day 14 | 137 | 17 | 84 | 12 |
SD: Standard deviation
Standard deviation of the mean differences between the two measurement periods
| systolic | diastolic | |||
| SD | 95% CI | SD | 95% CI | |
| Home BP | 3.81 | 3.34 – 4.44 | 2.77 | 2.43 – 3.22 |
| 24-h ABPM | 7.83 | 6.90 – 9.17 | 4.09 | 3.59 – 4.77 |
| Office BP | 8.10 | 7.10 – 9.43 | 4.76 | 4.18 – 5.54 |
| p- value | ||||
| Home vers. 24-h ABPM | p < 0.001 | p = 0.127 | ||
| Home vers. Office BP | p < 0.001 | p < 0.001 | ||
| Office vers 24-h ABPM | p = 0.80 | p = 0.10 | ||
SD: Standard deviation of mean differences. 95% CI: 95% confidence interval.
Figure 1Reproducibility of measurements shown as squared differences (y-axis) between the first and second set of blood pressure (BP)measurements for Home BP, 24-h- ABPM and Office BP. Values are shown as box plots with median, 25/75 percentiles and minimum/maximum values. 1a: Squared systolic BP differences 1b.: Squared diastolic BP differences.
Figure 2Correlation coefficient of the blood pressure parameters with the left ventricular mass index (LVMI). The correlation coefficient of 24-h ABMP systolic BP (r = 0.52) with left ventricular mass index was significantly higher than with systolic office BP (r = 0.31) (p = 0.035). The difference between 24-h ABPM and home BP (r = 0.46) was not significant (p = 0.456). The correlation coefficient with LVMI was not significantly different between the tree measurement methods for diastolic BP.
Sensitivity of BP methods to measure significant BP changes
| Number of Patients | ||
| Blood pressure method | Systolic | Diastolic |
| home BP | 17 | 10 |
| 24-h ABPM | 65 | 19 |
| Office BP | 64 | 23 |
Number of patients needed to detect a two-sided α risk of 5% and a statistical power of 80% a systolic and diastolic blood pressure difference of 5 mm Hg.