| Literature DB >> 28077860 |
Grzegorz Bilo1,2, Oscar Sala1,2, Carlotta Perego2, Andrea Faini2, Lan Gao1,2,3, Anna Głuszewska2,4, Juan Eugenio Ochoa2, Dario Pellegrini1,2, Laura Maria Lonati2, Gianfranco Parati1,2.
Abstract
During blood pressure (BP) measurement, the recommended positioning of the cuff bladder center is directly above the brachial artery. We investigated the relevance of incorrect cuff positioning during (1) auscultatory measurement with an appropriate or improperly small cuff and (2) oscillometric measurement with a wide-range cuff designed to guarantee accurate measurements regardless of position. In subjects with wide BP and arm circumference ranges, (1) auscultatory BP was repeatedly measured with a properly positioned cuff (reference) and, simultaneously, with an identical cuff placed on the other arm in either a correct or an incorrect position (test). The measurements were performed with a properly sized (N=57) or an improperly small cuff (N=33). (2) Auscultatory measurements obtained with a properly positioned and sized cuff were compared with oscillometric measurements obtained with a specially designed wide-range cuff (Omron IntelliWrap) placed on the contralateral arm either in a correct or an incorrect position. Auscultatory BP measures were unaffected by incorrect positioning of a properly sized cuff, whereas with undercuffing, BP was overestimated with the cuff displaced by 90° laterally (systolic/diastolic BP differences: 4.9±4.6/4.0±4.6 mm Hg, P<0.01) or by 180° (3.9±5.4/4.2±5.1 mm Hg, P<0.01) in relation to the correct position. Incorrect placement of the oscillometric cuff had no significant effect on the accuracy of the measurements (difference with correct position <1.5 mm Hg). Incorrect cuff positioning introduces a systematic overestimation of auscultatory BP when the cuff is too small in relation to arm circumference but not when it is correctly sized. No systematic error was observed with oscillometric measurements obtained with a specially designed wide-range cuff.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28077860 PMCID: PMC5506235 DOI: 10.1038/hr.2016.184
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hypertens Res ISSN: 0916-9636 Impact factor: 3.872
Characteristics of study participants
| Age (years) | 44.4±14.0 (24–78) | 50.8±16.9 (21–79) |
| Males/females | 25 (44%)/32 (56%) | 22 (67%)/11 (33%) |
| BMI (kg m−2) | 29.8±8.8 | 30.2±6.2 |
| Arm circumference (cm) | 31.9±5.8 (23–42) | 31.9±3.7 (28–41) |
| <28 cm | 19 (33.3%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| 28–31 cm | 6 (10.5%) | 20 (60.6%) |
| 32–36 cm | 14 (24.6%) | 8 (24.2%) |
| >36 cm | 18 (31.6%) | 5 (15.2%) |
| Entry systolic BP (mm Hg) | 117.6±17.7 (95–197) | 126.8±16.1 (99–157) |
| Entry diastolic BP (mm Hg) | 76.2±10.8 (56–109) | 85.2±10.1 (57–101) |
| ⩽100 mm Hg | 7 (12.3%) | 1 (3.0%) |
| 101–139 mm Hg | 45 (78.9%) | 24 (72.7%) |
| 140–159 mm Hg | 3 (5.3%) | 8 (24.2%) |
| ⩾160 mm Hg | 2 (3.5%) | 0 (0.0%) |
| ⩽60 mm Hg | 2 (3.5%) | 1 (3.0%) |
| 61–84 mm Hg | 44 (77.2%) | 14 (42.4%) |
| 85–99 mm Hg | 9 (15.8%) | 16 (48.5%) |
| ⩾100 mm Hg | 2 (3.5%) | 2 (6.1%) |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; BP, blood pressure.
Data are shown as means±s.d. (range) or counts (proportions) as appropriate.
Mean blood pressure (BP) values obtained with two devices: reference auscultatory device always in correct position and test device (either auscultatory or oscillometric) in varying positions
| Correct | 115.9±18.3 | 116.3±18.5 | 75.8±11.3 | 76.1±11.6 |
| 114.1±18.4 | 114.9±18.8 | 75.6±11.1 | 75.8±11.6 | |
| 114.9±17.9 | 114.6±17.1 | 75.5±11.3 | 75.8±10.9 | |
| 115.1±18.9 | 116.0±19.9 | 75.9±11.2 | 76.4±11.3 | |
| Correct | 124.6±15.0 | 124.1±15.1 | 85.2±10.4 | 85.0±9.7 |
| 123.9±15.0 | 125.2±15.7 | 84.4±10.5 | 86.3±11.5 | |
| 124.5±15.6 | 129.5±15.4 | 85.1±10.4 | 89.1±11.6 | |
| 124.4±15.2 | 128.3±15.9 | 84.9±10.6 | 89.1±11.6 | |
| Correct | 113.8±17.9 | 115.2±18.0 | 76.3±11.2 | 76.5±10.8 |
| 113.8±18.2 | 114.9±17.1 | 76.3±11.7 | 76.1±11.8 | |
| 113.7±17.7 | 115.1±17.6 | 76.3±11.4 | 76.2±11.9 | |
P<0.001 for difference between the reference and test device.
Figure 1Blood pressure (BP) effects of incorrect positioning of appropriately sized or undersized auscultatory device cuff and of ‘IntelliWrap’ cuff. The systolic BP (SBP, blue bars) and diastolic BP (DBP, red bars) values are shown as the mean difference±s.d. BA, brachial artery.
Figure 2Bland–Altman plots (right panels) of differences in systolic blood pressure (SBP) between the auscultatory reference device with the cuff in correct position (Ref.) and the auscultatory test device when the cuff of the latter was rotated by 180°. The data are shown separately for appropriately sized (top) or undersized cuffs (bottom). The corresponding correlations are also shown (left panels).
Figure 3Bland–Altman plot (right panel) of differences in systolic blood pressure (SBP) between the auscultatory reference device with the cuff in the correct position (Ref.) and the oscillometric test device with the IntelliWrap cuff rotated by 180°. The corresponding correlation is also shown (left panel).