Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2956128 Journal of the American Society of Hypertension 2016 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Poor blood pressure (BP) measurement technique contributes to pseudoresistant hypertension (HTN).•The prevalence of pseudoresistant HTN due to inaccurate BP measurement was 33%.•Routine clinic BP rarely underestimates the true BP in resistant HTN.

The prevalence of pseudoresistant hypertension (HTN) due to inaccurate BP measurement remains unknown. Triage BP measurements and measurements obtained at the same clinic visit by trained physicians were compared in consecutive adult patients referred for uncontrolled resistant HTN (RHTN). Triage BP measurements were taken by the clinic staff during normal intake procedures. BP measurements were obtained by trained physicians using the BpTRU (VSM Med Tech Ltd. Coquitlam, Canada) device. The prevalence of uncontrolled RHTN and differences in BP measurements were compared. Of 130 patients with uncontrolled RHTN, 33.1% (n = 43) were falsely identified as having uncontrolled RHTN based on triage BP measurements. The median (inter-quartile range) of differences in systolic BP between pseudoresistant and true resistant groups were 23 (17–33) mm Hg and 13 (6–21) mm Hg, respectively (P = .0001). The median (inter-quartile range) of differences in diastolic BP between the two groups were 12 (7–18) mm Hg and 8 (4–11) mm Hg, respectively (P = .001). Triage BP technique overestimated the prevalence of uncontrolled RHTN in approximately 33% of the patients emphasizing the importance of obtaining accurate BP measurements.

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