Follow-up of outpatients with essential hypertension. A comparison of three methods of blood pressure measurement. |
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Authors: | A Dukát I Balazovjech J Lietava P Gavorník |
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Affiliation: | Second Medical Department, Medical School, Comenius University, Brastilava, Slovak Republic. |
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Abstract: | Compared with conventional, routine blood pressure measurement in the outpatient department of a hospital, 24-hour blood pressure monitoring provides more comprehensive information about blood pressure values in day-to-day life of the hypertensive patient. The hospital setting with all its stimuli affects the hypertensive patients so that their values will be statistically significantly higher compared with normal ones. Recent years have seen the introduction into clinical practice of self-monitoring by the patients themselves. Comparison of these three methods for blood pressure measurements revealed that self-monitoring may provide fairly accurate values comparable with those obtained by the "standard method", i.e., 24-hour monitoring. In view of the low variability of the mean value of blood pressure over a period of several days, self-monitoring can be employed in groups of selected outpatients on long-term follow-up. |
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