Optimal size of cuff bladder for indirect measurement of arterial pressure in adults

This study tested the hypothesis that a sphygmomanometer cuff bladder long enough to encircle the arm in most adults (ʼobese cuff) would provide a more accurate and precise estimate of intra-arterial pressure than the usual ʼstandard ʼ cuff bladder. In 53 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary angi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hypertension 1989-08, Vol.7 (8), p.607-613
Hauptverfasser: Russell, Andrew E, Wing, Lindon M.H, Smith, Stephen A, Aylward, Philip E, McRitchie, Robert J, Hassam, Rhonda M, West, Malcolm J, Chalmers, John P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study tested the hypothesis that a sphygmomanometer cuff bladder long enough to encircle the arm in most adults (ʼobese cuff) would provide a more accurate and precise estimate of intra-arterial pressure than the usual ʼstandard ʼ cuff bladder. In 53 patients undergoing diagnostic coronary angiography (35 males, 18 females, aged 36–79 years), indirect blood pressure, measured in the left arm with a random-zero sphygmomanometer, was compared with simultaneously measured femoral intra-arterial pressure. Duplicate indirect measurements were made with each of two cuffs containing bladders measuring 39 15 cm (ʼobeseʼ) and 23 12 cm (ʼstandardʼ).The obese cuff bladder encircled 80% or more of the arm circumference in all subjects, whereas the standard cuff bladder met this requirement in only 19% of the subjects. For both systolic and diastolic pressure there was marked interindividual variability in the differences between indirect and direct measurements with both cuffs. With the obese cuff there was no systematic error in the diastolic blood pressure measurement. The standard cuff consistently overestimated diastolic pressure by 7.7 ± 8.3mmHg (mean ±s.d.). For both cuffs, the difference between indirect and direct diastolic pressure increased with arm size (P
ISSN:0263-6352
1473-5598
DOI:10.1097/00004872-198908000-00002