Recommended Procedures for the Application of ABPM
Procedure . | Recommendation . |
---|---|
Device | Should be validated by the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation or the British Hypertension Society for use in children |
May be oscillometric or auscultatory | |
Application | Trained personnel should apply the monitor |
Correct cuff size should be selected | |
Right and left arm and a lower extremity BP should be obtained to rule out coarctation of the aorta | |
Use nondominant arm unless there is large difference in size between the left arm and right arm, then apply to the arm with the higher BP | |
Take readings every 15–20 min during the day and every 20–30 min at night | |
Compare (calibrate) the device to resting BP measured by the same technique (oscillometric or auscultatory) | |
Record time of medications, activity, and sleep | |
Assessment | A physician who is familiar with pediatric ABPM should interpret the results |
Interpret only recordings of adequate quality. Minimum of 1 reading per hour, 40–50 for a full day, 65%–75% of all possible recordings | |
Edit outliers by inspecting for biologic plausibility, edit out calibration measures | |
Calculate mean BP, BP load (% of readings above threshold), and dipping (% decline in BP from wake to sleep) | |
Interpret with pediatric ABPM normal data by sex and height | |
Use AHA staging schema155 | |
Consider interpretation of 24-h, daytime, and nighttime MAP, especially in patients with CKD173,198 |
Procedure . | Recommendation . |
---|---|
Device | Should be validated by the Association for the Advancement of Medical Instrumentation or the British Hypertension Society for use in children |
May be oscillometric or auscultatory | |
Application | Trained personnel should apply the monitor |
Correct cuff size should be selected | |
Right and left arm and a lower extremity BP should be obtained to rule out coarctation of the aorta | |
Use nondominant arm unless there is large difference in size between the left arm and right arm, then apply to the arm with the higher BP | |
Take readings every 15–20 min during the day and every 20–30 min at night | |
Compare (calibrate) the device to resting BP measured by the same technique (oscillometric or auscultatory) | |
Record time of medications, activity, and sleep | |
Assessment | A physician who is familiar with pediatric ABPM should interpret the results |
Interpret only recordings of adequate quality. Minimum of 1 reading per hour, 40–50 for a full day, 65%–75% of all possible recordings | |
Edit outliers by inspecting for biologic plausibility, edit out calibration measures | |
Calculate mean BP, BP load (% of readings above threshold), and dipping (% decline in BP from wake to sleep) | |
Interpret with pediatric ABPM normal data by sex and height | |
Use AHA staging schema155 | |
Consider interpretation of 24-h, daytime, and nighttime MAP, especially in patients with CKD173,198 |
Adapted from Flynn JT, Daniels SR, Hayman LL, et al; American Heart Association Atherosclerosis, Hypertension and Obesity in Youth Committee of the Council on Cardiovascular Disease in the Young. Update: ambulatory blood pressure monitoring in children and adolescents: a scientific statement from the American Heart Association. Hypertension. 2014;63(5):1116–1135.