1998
DOI: 10.1177/0272989x9801800411
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Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring and Diagnostic Errors in Hypertension

Abstract: Random variability of blood pressure complicates the diagnosis and subsequent treatment of hypertension. To evaluate the importance of the number of blood pressure measurements in the correct diagnosis and control of hypertension, the authors used a Bayesian model to estimate the true average blood pressure of a group of newly diagnosed hypertensives, then calculated the diagnostic error that would result from monitoring methods using 24 daytime measurements or from using only three random monitoring measureme… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…This is in accordance with suggestions that better monitoring in hypertension is required to confirm the diagnosis. 5 Treatment guidelines recommend establishing the existence of sustained hypertension for a period of at least three to six months before deciding to start treatment. 6,7 In reality, doctors do not adhere to the guidelines [8][9][10] and treatment is typically initiated after less than three BP measurements.…”
Section: S1:35mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is in accordance with suggestions that better monitoring in hypertension is required to confirm the diagnosis. 5 Treatment guidelines recommend establishing the existence of sustained hypertension for a period of at least three to six months before deciding to start treatment. 6,7 In reality, doctors do not adhere to the guidelines [8][9][10] and treatment is typically initiated after less than three BP measurements.…”
Section: S1:35mentioning
confidence: 99%