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Blood pressure measurement and assessment of arterial structure and function: an expert group position paper.

Roland AsmarGeorge StergiouAlejandro de la SierraBojan JelakovićSandrine MillasseauJirar TopouchianKohji ShiraiJacques BlacherAlberto AvolioPiotr JankowskiGianfranco ParatiGrzegorz BiloKrzysztof RewiukIveta MintaleMarek RajzerEnrico Agabiti-RoseiCan InceArman PostadzhiyanReuven ZimlichmanHarry Struijker-BoudierAthanase BenetosMagnus BäckNebojsa TasicYuriy SirenkoParounak ZelveianHongyu WangFrancesco FantinYulia KotovskayaMarat EzhovVasilios Kotsis
Published in: Journal of hypertension (2024)
Measuring blood pressure (BP) and investigating arterial hemodynamics are essential in understanding cardiovascular disease and assessing cardiovascular risk. Several methods are used to measure BP in the doctor's office, at home, or over 24 h under ambulatory conditions. Similarly, several noninvasive methods have been introduced for assessing arterial structure and function; these methods differ for the large arteries, the small ones, and the capillaries. Consequently, when studying arterial hemodynamics, the clinician is faced with a multitude of assessment methods whose technical details, advantages, and limitations are sometimes unclear. Moreover, the conditions and procedures for their optimal implementation, and/or the reference normality values for the parameters they yield are not always taken into sufficient consideration. Therefore, a practice guideline summarizing the main methods and their use in clinical practice is needed. This expert group position paper was developed by an international group of scientists after a two-day meeting during which each of the most used methods and techniques for blood pressure measurement and arterial function and structure evaluation were presented and discussed, focusing on their advantages, limitations, indications, normal values, and their pragmatic clinical application.
Keyphrases
  • blood pressure
  • clinical practice
  • cardiovascular disease
  • primary care
  • hypertensive patients
  • heart rate
  • type diabetes
  • clinical trial
  • coronary artery disease
  • skeletal muscle
  • blood glucose