how to avoid mistakes when taking a blood pressure

Hypertension is known as a silent killer for it rarely has symptoms initially. It is important to treat hypertension early as it can lead to heart disease and stroke. As hypertension has many serious side effects it is imperative to accurately obtain blood pressure. Errors can lead to treatment of a non-existent condition or undertreat a more serious one

Cuff Size

Inside of the blood pressure cuff is a bladder that inflates to cut off blood flow in the arm. If the bladder, not the cuff itself, does not encircle at least 80 percent of an adult arm then the blood pressure will be artificially higher, according to the online resource for medical professionals, Medscape. A large adult cuff is more suitable for most adult arms, but if the cuff is too large, it can also falsely affect blood pressure.

Posture

The December 2009 issue of “The Journal of Family Practice” published an article on treating patient’s blood pressure. This article states pseudo hypertension can happen from improper posture. To obtain proper blood pressure, the body needs to be seated with back supported, legs uncrossed, arm horizontal to the ground with the cuffed area of the arm at the level of the heart. Allowing the arm to hang by the side instead of being horizontal can raise the BP by 23/10 mmHg respectively. This margin of error could make a healthy person appear hypertensive.

Listening Skills

The sounds heard during blood pressure readings are broken up into five distinct phases or Korotkoff sounds. Some operators record the diastolic number sooner than recommended. The fourth phase is when the sound becomes more muffled before it disappears completely (phase V). Recording the lower BP number at phase IV versus phase V leads to a higher diastolic pressure. Additionally, “Hospital Physician” published an article in March of 2002 stating another common sound error is failing to detect the auscultatory gap. This gap is a period of silence that happens when listening for the pressure. Failing to detect this gap leads to a lower systolic pressure. This problem is easily avoided by inflating the cuff until there is an absence of the radial pulse.

Operator Errors

The “British Medical Journal” published the ABC of hypertension Blood Pressure Management in April of 2001. A common operator error is observer error and preference. The article noted that many operators have a preference to end numbers in 0 or 5 for BP readings, leading to a lowering or rising of 2 to 3 mmHg in both numbers. Additionally operators tend to round down the numbers if the person getting the measurement appears healthy, and round up if the person appears overweight or unhealthy. The article goes on to state rapid inflation and deflation of the cuff by the operator can lead to artificially lower systolic and higher diastolic numbers