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    Am J Hypertens. 1993 Jan;6(1):66-71.

    Improved accuracy of indirect blood pressure measurement in patients with obese arms.

    Stolt M, Sjönell G, Aström H, Rössner S, Hansson L.

    Department of Development of Primary Health Care, Stockholm, Sweden.

    We studied 20 patients with moderate to severe obesity (body mass index 37 +/- 8 kg/m2) with obese arms (arm circumference 37 +/- 4 cm). Their blood pressure was measured directly in the brachial artery in one arm and simultaneously indirectly in the other arm using either a large standard cuff (rubber bag 12 x 35 cm) or a new cuff (the Tricuff, Pressure Group AB, Stockholm) containing three rubber bags of different sizes, which automatically selected the appropriately sized bag in relation to arm circumference. Both cuffs showed a significant overestimation of the diastolic blood pressure (standard cuff 13 mm Hg, P < .001, Tricuff 6 mm Hg, P < .01). The error of the standard cuff was significantly greater than that of the Tricuff (P < .001). The differences in systolic blood pressure between the intraarterially and the indirectly measured results were small (0.2 to 3 mm Hg) and not statistically significant with either cuff. The new Tricuff offered an advantage as compared to a large standard cuff in terms of a lesser overestimation of the diastolic blood pressure. In practical terms, this should lead to a reduction in the overestimation of diastolic hypertension in obese individuals.

    PMID: 8427664 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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