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Comparison between cuff-based and invasive systolic blood pressure amplification

Authors :
Tan V. Bui
Dean S. Picone
Martin G. Schultz
Matthew K. Armstrong
Xiaoqing Peng
J. Andrew Black
Nathan Dwyer
Philip Roberts-Thomson
Heath Adams
Alun D. Hughes
James E. Sharman
Source :
J Hypertens
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Accurate measurement of central blood pressure (BP) using upper arm cuff-based methods is associated with several factors, including determining the level of systolic BP (SBP) amplification. This study aimed to determine the agreement between cuff-based and invasively measured SBP amplification. Patients undergoing coronary angiography had invasive SBP amplification (brachial SBP – central SBP) measured simultaneously with cuff-based SBP amplification using a commercially available central BP device (device 1: Sphygmocor Xcel; n = 171, 70% men, 60 ± 10 years) and a now superseded model of a central BP device (device 2: Uscom BP+; n = 52, 83% men, 62 ± 10 years). Mean difference (±2SD, limits of agreement) between cuff-based and invasive SBP amplification was 4 mmHg (−12, +20 mmHg, P < 0.001) for device 1 and −2 mmHg (−14, +10 mmHg, P = 0.10) for device 2. Both devices systematically overestimated SBP amplification at lower levels and underestimated at higher levels of invasive SBP amplification, but with stronger bias for device 1 (r = −0.68 vs. r = −0.52; Z = 2.72; P = 0.008). Concordance of cuff-based and invasive SBP amplification across quartiles of invasive SBP amplification was low, particularly in the lowest and highest quartiles. The root mean square errors from regression between cuff-based central SBP and brachial SBP were significantly lower (indicating less variability) than from invasive regression models (P < 0.001). Irrespective of the difference from invasive measurements, cuff-based estimates of SBP amplification showed evidence of proportional systematic bias and had less individual variability. These observations could provide insights on how to improve the performance of cuff-based central BP.

Details

ISSN :
14735598 and 02636352
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Hypertension
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b9eb846a06aeeafbfcbb4d83deb0f70d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/hjh.0000000000003228