Exam
Blood Pressure
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Blood Pressure
, BP Examination, Korotkoff Sound
See Also
Hypertension
Hypertension Criteria
Pediatric Vital Signs
Blood Pressure Physiology
Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring
Home Blood Pressure Monitor
Precautions
Blood Pressures are frequently inaccurate due to improper cuff size, technique, or inadequate rest before measurement
Recent
Nicotine
in last 30-60 minutes can raise systolic Blood Pressure as much as 25 mmHg
Unlike
Nicotine
, typical
Caffeine
doses are not associated with significant Blood Pressure increase in regular users
Avoid finger Blood Pressure monitors (and aside from morbidly obese patients, avoid wrist monitors)
Physiology
See
Blood Pressure Physiology
Efficacy
Automated Blood Pressure
U.S. Blood Pressure Validated Devices
https://www.validatebp.org/
Automated Blood Pressure is now recommended over manual Blood Pressures
Mercury
sphygmomanometers have largely been replaced due to toxicity risk
Both manual and automatic non-mercury Blood Pressure cuffs require ongoing calibration
Manual Blood Pressures have significant inter-operator variation
Blood Pressure measurement should be performed by slowly lowering pressure in 2-3 mmHg increments
Some studies find automated Blood Pressures inaccurate, overestimating both systolic and diastolic Blood Pressure
Confirm elevated automated Blood Pressure with 2 manual, auscultated Blood Pressures
Flynn (2012) J Pediatr 160(3): 434-40 [PubMed]
Mansoor (2016) Open Access Maced J Med Sci 4(3): 404–9 [PubMed]
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5042623/
Other studies find automated Blood Pressures to be lower than manual when patient is at home or alone in clinic
Roerecke (2019) JAMA Intern Med 179(3): 351-62 [PubMed]
Equipment
Blood Pressure cuff size
Poor cuff fit results in inaccurate Blood Pressure
Undersized cuff artificially raises Blood Pressure
Oversized cuff artificially lowers Blood Pressure
Pediatric Cuff size
Based on arm circumference measured at point midway between acromion and olecranon
Minimum Cuff Width
Width >2/3 length of upper arm
Width >40% of arm circumference
Minimum Cuff length
Bladder
nearly encircles arm
Bladder
length 80-100% of circumference
Adult Cuff size
Cuff Width: 40% of limb's circumference
Cuff Length:
Bladder
at 80% of limb's circumference
Indications for large cuff or thigh cuff
Upper arm circumference >34 cm
Indications for
Forearm
cuff (with radial palpation)
Upper arm circumference >50 cm
Preparation
Positioning of Blood Pressure Cuff
Cuff applied directly over skin (not through clothes)
Clothes artificially raises Blood Pressure
Center inflatable
Bladder
over brachial artery
Position lower cuff border 2.5 cm above antecubital
Patient's arm slightly flexed at elbow
Position stethoscope bell over brachial artery
Technique
BP measurement
Patient should be comfortable, seated with back supported and with empty
Bladder
Legs uncrossed and feet flat on the floor
Patient should not speaking during measurement
Wait 5 minutes of rest before checking Blood Pressure, and avoid
Nicotine
within prior 30 minutes
Check Blood Pressure while seated, in right arm (
Aortic Coarctation
may falsely lower BP measurement)
Take Blood Pressure with arm supported at heart level
Inflate cuff rapidly to level above suspected SBP
Deflate cuff slowly at a rate of 2-3 mmHg per second
Listen for auditory vibrations from artery (Korotkoff)
Systolic Blood Pressure: Onset of consecutive sounds
Diastolic Blood Pressure: Disappearance of sounds
Technique
Obtain Multiple Blood Pressure measurements
Validation of abnormal readings
Recheck Blood Pressure twice more at same visit
Blood Pressure improves to <160/89 after 30 minutes rest in >30% with
Severe Hypertension
Grassi (2008) J Clin Hypertens 10(9): 662-7 [PubMed]
Aortic Coarctation
Left and right arm, and one lower extremity
Orthostatic Hypotension
Most common chronically in the elderly (
Fall Risk
)
Check Blood Pressure and
Pulse
, Supine and Standing (
Postural Blood Pressure
)
Interpretation
See
Hypertension Criteria
See
Hypotension
Interpretation
Children
See
Pediatric Vital Signs
Formulas for Systolic Blood Pressure estimate (for over age 1 year)
Median SBP = 90 mmHg + (2 x Age in years)
Minimum SBP = 70 mmHg + (2 x Age in years)
Rough estimate for Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP)
Typical systolic Blood Pressure
Infant: 80
Preschool: 90
Adolescent: 100
Minimal systolic Blood Pressure
Infant: >60
Toddler >70
Preschool >75
School-age: >80
Teen >90
Term Newborn (3 kg)
Age 12 hours: 50-70 / 25-45
Age 96 hours: 60-90 / 20-60
Age 7 days: 74 +/- 22 mmHg (Systolic BP)
Age 42 days: 96 +/- 20 mmHg (Systolic BP)
Infant (6 months old)
Blood Pressure: 87-105 / 53-66
Toddler (2 years old)
Blood Pressure: 95-105/53-66
School age (7 years old)
Blood Pressure: 97-112 / 57-71
Adolescent (15 years old)
Blood Pressure: 112-128 / 66-80
References
Handler (2009) Perm J 13(3): 51–54 [PubMed]
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2911816/
Kallioinen (2017) J Hypertens 35(3): 421–441 [PubMed]
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5278896/
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