| Literature DB >> 27977471 |
Noa Kallioinen1, Andrew Hill, Mark S Horswill, Helen E Ward, Marcus O Watson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To interpret blood pressure (BP) data appropriately, healthcare providers need to be knowledgeable of the factors that can potentially impact the accuracy of BP measurement and contribute to variability between measurements.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27977471 PMCID: PMC5278896 DOI: 10.1097/HJH.0000000000001197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hypertens ISSN: 0263-6352 Impact factor: 4.844
MEDLINE and CINAHL EBSCOHost search terms for the preliminary list of potential sources of error (limited by Humans and English language)
| Potential source of inaccuracy | Search terms | Number of results |
| Acute ingestion of food | blood pressure AND (food OR meal OR ingest* OR eat) AND acute effect* NOT (alcohol OR caffein* OR nicotine) | 143 |
| Acute alcohol use | blood pressure AND alcohol AND acute NOT withdraw* | 274 |
| Acute caffeine use | blood pressure AND (caffeine OR coffee OR ‘energy drink*’) AND acute | 139 |
| Acute nicotine use | blood pressure AND (nicotine OR smok* OR cigarette*) AND acute effect* | 215 |
| Bladder distension | ‘blood pressure’ AND ‘bladder distension’ | 23 |
| Cold exposure | blood pressure AND cold expos* | 238 |
| Paretic arm | blood pressure AND (paretic OR paralysed arm OR paralyzed arm) | 9 |
| White-coat effect | blood pressure AND (white coat effect OR white-coat effect) | 294 |
| Indirect measurement | aneroid AND mercury AND blood pressure | 48 |
| General device inaccuracy | sphygmomanometer* AND agreement | 101 |
| Aneroid device inaccuracy | aneroid AND mercury AND blood pressure | 48 |
| Automated device inaccuracy | auto* AND manual AND blood pressure | 231 |
| Pseudohypertension | pseudohypertension OR pseudo-hypertension | 76 |
| Rest period duration | (blood pressure measurement OR measuring blood pressure) AND before AND (wait* or rest*) | 88 |
| Body position | blood pressure AND (body position*) | 224 |
| Leg position | blood pressure AND (leg cross* OR leg position*) | 84 |
| Unsupported back | blood pressure AND (back support* OR supported back OR unsupported back OR back unsupported) | 13 |
| Unsupported arm | blood pressure AND (arm support* OR supported arm OR unsupported arm OR arm unsupported) | 37 |
| Arm position | blood pressure AND arm position* | 117 |
| Cuff size | blood pressure AND (cuff* size* OR bladder* size*) | 221 |
| Cuff tightness | blood pressure AND (loose* OR tight*) AND cuff | 13 |
| Clothing effect | blood pressure AND (clothes OR clothing) | 167 |
| Stethoscope placement | blood pressure AND stethoscope AND (placement OR location) | 4 |
| Talking during measurement | blood pressure measur* AND (talk OR talks OR talking) | 28 |
| Stethoscope head | blood pressure AND diaphragm AND bell | 7 |
| Deflation rate | blood pressure AND deflat* rate | 24 |
| Interval between repeated measurements | (‘blood pressure measurement’ OR ‘blood pressure measurements’ OR ‘blood pressure readings’) AND interval AND time | 142 |
| Number of measurements | blood pressure AND number of measurements | 65 |
| Interarm difference | blood pressure AND (arm difference OR inter-arm difference OR interarm difference) | 134 |
| Auscultatory gap | auscultatory gap | 8 |
| General observer inaccuracy | blood pressure AND (observer error* OR observer factors) | 40 |
| Korotkoff sound interpretation | (korotkoff OR korotkov) AND (sound* OR phase*) | 255 |
| Terminal digit bias | blood pressure AND (terminal digit OR end digit OR final digit OR last digit OR terminal-digit OR end-digit OR final-digit OR last-digit) | 50 |
FIGURE 1Flow chart showing study selection.
Empirically-evaluated potential sources of inaccuracy in the measurement of adults’ resting blood pressure (note that ranges expressed in mmHg include only significant effects and hence exclude results from studies reported in Supplementary Tables that lacked significance testing)
| Range of reported significant mean effects (in mmHg) unless specified | |||
| Potential source of inaccuracy | SBP | DBP | Suppl. Table number |
| Patient-related | |||
| 1. Acute meal ingestion [ | −6 | −5 to −1.9 | 1 |
| 2. Acute alcohol use [ | −23.6 to +24 | −14 to +16 | 2 |
| 3. Acute caffeine use [ | +3 to +14 | +2.1 to +13 | 3 |
| 4. Acute nicotine use or exposure [ | +2.81 to +25 | +2 to +18 | 4 |
| 5. Bladder distension [ | +4.2 to +33 | +2.8 to +18.5 | 5 |
| 6. Cold exposure [ | +5 to +32 | +4 to +23 | 6 |
| 7. Paretic arm [ | +2 | +5 | 7 |
| 8. White-coat effect [ | −12.7 to +26.7 | −8.2 to +21 | 8 |
| Device-related | |||
| 9. Device model bias | |||
| Mercury models | |||
| vs. invasive criterion [ | −10.6 to −4 | +1.9 to +4 | 9A |
| Aneroid models | |||
| vs. invasive criterion [ | −9.7 to −4.0 | +5.1 | 9B |
| vs. noninvasive criterion [ | −0.8 | −1.7 | 9C |
| Automated models | |||
| vs. invasive criterion [ | −23 to +6 | −3 to +5.6 | 9D |
| vs. noninvasive criterion [ | −3.7 to +16.53 | −8 to +9.71 | 9E |
| 10. Device calibration error | |||
| Mercury [ | 0–61.8% of individual devices > ±3 mmHg calibration error | 10A | |
| Aneroid [ | 1.4–69.7% of individual devices > ±3 mmHg calibration error | 10B | |
| Automated [ | 4.5–26% of individual devices > ±3 mmHg calibration error | 10C | |
| Procedure-related | |||
| 11. Insufficient rest period [ | +4.2 to +11.6 | +1.8 to +4.3 | 11 |
| 12. Body position | |||
| Standing [ | −2.9 to +5 | +7 | 12 |
| Supine [ | −10.7 to +9.5 | −13.4 to +6.4 | 12 |
| 13. Legs crossed at knees [ | +2.5 to +14.89 | +1.4 to +10.81 | 13 |
| 14. Unsupported back [ | No significant effects reported | +6.5 | 14 |
| 15. Unsupported arm [ | +4.87 | +2.7 to +4.81 | 15 |
| 16. Arm lower than heart level [ | +3.7 to +23 | +2.8 to +12 | 16 |
| 17. Incorrect choice of cuff size | |||
| Smaller cuff [ | +2.08 to +11.2 | +1.61 to +6.6 | 17 |
| Larger cuff [ | −3.7 to −1.45 | −4.7 to −0.96 | 17 |
| 18. Cuff placed over clothing [ | No significant effects reported | No significant effects reported | 18 |
| 19. Stethoscope under cuff [ | +1.0 to +3.1 | −10.6 to −3.5 | 19 |
| 20. Talking during measurement [ | +4 to +19 | +5 to +14.3 | 20 |
| 21. Use of stethoscope bell (vs. diaphragm) [ | −3.8 to +1.54 | −1.61 | 21 |
| 22. Excessive pressure on stethoscope head [ | No significant effects reported | −15 to −9 | 22 |
| 23. Fast cuff deflation rate [ | −9 to −2.6 | +2.1 to +6.3 | 23 |
| 24. Short interval between measurements [ | No significant effects reported | No significant effects reported | 24 |
| 25. Reliance on a single measurement [ | +3.3 to +10.4 | −2.4 to +0.6 | 25 |
| 26. Interarm variability [ | |3.3| to |6.32| | |2.7| to |5.06| | 26 |
| Observer-related | |||
| 27. Observer hearing deficit [ | −1.55 to −0.11 | +1.05 to +4.32 | 27 |
| 28. Korotkoff Phase IV (vs. V) for DBP [ | N/A | +12.5 | 28 |
| 29. Terminal digit preference for zero [ | 1–79% over-representation of terminal zero | 3–79% over-representation of terminal zero | 29 |
aOnly one study found a significant effect.
bNo study found a significant directional effect (although one found reduced variation in SBP).
Empirically-evaluated potential sources of inaccuracy that may be introduced at each stage in the process of measuring an adult's resting blood pressure, and the reported direction of significant effects (note that numbers in parentheses correspond to the numbering of potential sources of inaccuracy in the ‘RESULTS’ section, Table 2 and the Supplementary Tables)
| Stage in the process of blood pressure measurement | Potential sources of inaccuracy introduced | Direction of significant effects | |
| SBP | DBP | ||
| Before measurement | Acute meal ingestion (1) | − | − |
| Acute alcohol use (2) | ± | ± | |
| Acute caffeine use (3) | + | + | |
| Acute nicotine use or exposure (4) | + | + | |
| Bladder distension (5) | + | + | |
| Cold exposure (6) | + | + | |
| Insufficient rest period (11) | + | + | |
| Selecting the device | Device model bias | ± | ± |
| Device calibration error (10) | ± | ± | |
| Positioning the patient | Standing body position (vs. sitting) (12) | ± | + |
| Supine body position (vs. sitting) (12) | ± | ± | |
| Legs crossed at knees (13) | + | + | |
| Unsupported back (14) | + | ||
| Unsupported arm (15) | + | + | |
| Arm lower than heart level (16) | + | + | |
| Attaching the device to the patient | Paretic arm (7) | + | + |
| Smaller cuff (vs. correct size) (17) | + | + | |
| Larger cuff (vs. correct size) (17) | − | − | |
| Cuff placed over clothing (18) | |||
| Stethoscope under cuff (19) | + | − | |
| Taking the measurement | White-coat effect (8) | ± | ± |
| Talking during measurement (20) | + | + | |
| Use of stethoscope bell (vs. diaphragm) (21) | ± | − | |
| Excessive pressure on stethoscope head (22) | − | ||
| Fast cuff deflation rate (23) | − | + | |
| Observer hearing deficit (27) | − | + | |
| Korotkoff phase IV (vs. V) for DBP (28) | N/A | + | |
| Short interval between measurements (24) | |||
| Interpreting the measurement | Reliance on a single measurement (25) | + | ± |
| Interarm variability | ± | ± | |
| Terminal digit preference for zero (29) | ± | ± | |
Symbols indicate whether significant increases (+), significant decreases (−) or both (±) were reported. Sources for which all reported directional effects were nonsignificant are marked ns.
aDirection depends on the device type and model (Table 2 and Supplementary Tables 9A–9E).
bDirection depends on which arm was selected for measurement (individuals differ in which arm will yield the higher values).