MANAGEMENT OF HYPERTENSION AFTER AMBULATORY BLOOD-PRESSURE MONITORING

被引:37
|
作者
GRIN, JM [1 ]
MCCABE, EJ [1 ]
WHITE, WB [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV CONNECTICUT, CTR HLTH,SCH MED,HYPERTENS & VASC DIS SECT, 263 FARMINGTON AVE, FARMINGTON, CT 06032 USA
关键词
BLOOD PRESSURE MONITORS; AMBULATORY CARE; HYPERTENSION; PHYSICIANS PRACTICE PATTERNS; MONITORING; PHYSIOLOGICAL;
D O I
10.7326/0003-4819-118-11-199306010-00001
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective: To study the test-ordering behavior of practicing physicians regarding ambulatory monitoring of blood pressure and to assess changes in patient management after this study. Design: Cross-sectional assessment of physicians' practice habits regarding the ordering of ambulatory blood pressure monitoring and a longitudinal study of patient management after monitoring. Setting: Physicians' offices in central Connecticut. Participants: Two hundred thirty-seven consecutive patients referred by 65 community- and hospital-based physicians. Measurements: Indications for ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, changes in diagnosis and therapy, and office blood pressures before and after the ambulatory blood pressure study. Results: The main indications for ordering the test included borderline hypertension (27% of studies ordered), assessment of blood pressure control during drug therapy (25%), evaluation for ''white coat'' or ''office'' hypertension (22%), and drug-resistant hypertension (16%). After the ambulatory blood pressure study, only 13% of the patients had further testing (for example, echocardiography); the diagnosis was changed in 41% of the patients, and antihypertensive therapy was changed in 46%. In 122 patients for whom data were complete, office blood pressure measured by the referring physician decreased from 161/96 +/- 22/12 mm Hg before the ambulatory blood pressure study to 151/86 +/- 27/12 mm Hg 3 months after the study (P = 0.004 for systolic blood pressure and P < 0.001 for diastolic blood pressure). One to 2 years after the study, office blood pressure was 149/86 +/- 24/12 mm Hg (P > 0.2 compared with 3 months after the study). Seventy-two percent of the patients had a lower office blood pressure within 3 months of the ambulatory blood pressure study. Conclusions: Practicing physicians use ambulatory blood pressure recordings for appropriate indications, and data from the monitoring studies affected the management of patients with hypertension.
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页码:833 / 837
页数:5
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