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Reproducibility of ambulatory and clinic blood pressure measurements in elderly hypertensive subjects
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1993
Year
Both 24-h and daytime ambulatory blood pressure monitoring significantly improve the reproducibility of blood pressure measurements compared with clinic blood pressure readings in elderly hypertensive subjects. Increasing the number of daytime blood pressure readings by 50% (from 30 to 45) reduced the variability of blood pressure measurement by 50%. Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring is of value in obtaining reproducible blood pressure measurements in elderly hypertensive subjects. However, more than 30 readings are needed during a daytime recording to significantly reduce variability compared with repeated clinic measurements, although night-time variability is not significantly affected if the number of readings is reduced to 12 over a 6-h period.