L A Green1, R D Froman. 1. St. Francis Hospital and Medical Center, Hartford, CT, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the equivalence of auscultatory and oscillatory blood pressure measurements. SETTING: Inner-city prenatal clinic. PARTICIPANTS: Eighty-one women in their 2nd to 9th month of pregnancy. DESIGN: Participants were assessed for systolic and diastolic blood pressures on left and right arms using auscultatory (manual) and oscillatory (electronic) methods. A correlational study design was used. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Differences in pressures related to arm and method of measurement. RESULTS: The oscillatory method produced consistently higher readings for both systolic (F[1,80] = 45.9, p < 0.001) and diastolic (F[1,80] = 25.79, p < 0.001) pressure readings. Correlations between estimates generally treated as substitutable all fell below the recommended level of 0.80 for measurement equivalence. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest the need for caution when interpreting blood pressure estimates as interchangeable. This is particularly important when patients move from clinic settings, where auscultatory methods predominate, to inpatient settings, where oscillatory methods of measurement are used.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the equivalence of auscultatory and oscillatory blood pressure measurements. SETTING: Inner-city prenatal clinic. PARTICIPANTS: Eighty-one women in their 2nd to 9th month of pregnancy. DESIGN:Participants were assessed for systolic and diastolic blood pressures on left and right arms using auscultatory (manual) and oscillatory (electronic) methods. A correlational study design was used. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Differences in pressures related to arm and method of measurement. RESULTS: The oscillatory method produced consistently higher readings for both systolic (F[1,80] = 45.9, p < 0.001) and diastolic (F[1,80] = 25.79, p < 0.001) pressure readings. Correlations between estimates generally treated as substitutable all fell below the recommended level of 0.80 for measurement equivalence. CONCLUSIONS: Results suggest the need for caution when interpreting blood pressure estimates as interchangeable. This is particularly important when patients move from clinic settings, where auscultatory methods predominate, to inpatient settings, where oscillatory methods of measurement are used.
Authors: Natalie A Bello; Jonathan J Woolley; Kirsten Lawrence Cleary; Louise Falzon; Bruce S Alpert; Suzanne Oparil; Gary Cutter; Ronald Wapner; Paul Muntner; Alan T Tita; Daichi Shimbo Journal: Hypertension Date: 2017-12-11 Impact factor: 10.190