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Quantitative Assessment of Blood Pressure Measurement Accuracy and Variability from Visual Auscultation Method by Observers without Receiving Medical Training

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posted on 2023-07-26, 14:12 authored by Wenai Chen, Fei Chen, Yong Feng, Aiqing Chen, Dingchang Zheng
This study aimed to quantify blood pressure (BP) measurement accuracy and variability with determinations from visualizing Korotkoff sound waveform. Thirty video clips of BP recordings from the educational training database of the British Hypertension Society were converted to Korotkoff sound waveforms. Ten observers without receiving medical training were asked to determine systolic and diastolic BPs (SBP and DBP) from the randomly arranged video clips and Korotkoff sound waveforms using two measurement methods: a) traditional manual auscultatory method of listening for Korotkoff sounds; and b) visual auscultation method by visualising the Korotkoff sound waveform, which was repeated three times on different days, making a total of 6 BP measurements from each observer on each BP recording. The measurement variability was calculated from the standard deviation of the three repeats, and the measurement error was calculated against the reference answers. Statistical analysis showed that, in comparison with the traditional manual auscultatory method, visual auscultation method significantly reduced overall measurement variability from 2.2 to 1.1 mmHg for SBP and from 1.9 to 0.9 mmHg for DBP (both p<0.001). It also showed that BP measurement errors were significant for both techniques (all p<0.01, except DBP from the traditional method). Although significant, the overall mean measurement errors were small, which were -1.5 and -1.2 mmHg for SBP, and -0.7 and 2.6 mmHg for DBP, respectively from the traditional manual auscultatory and visual auscultation methods. In conclusion, the visual auscultation method had the ability to achieve an acceptable degree of BP measurement accuracy, with smaller measurement variability in comparison with the traditional manual auscultatory method.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

2017

Issue number

353707

Page range

1-8

Publication title

BioMed Research International

ISSN

2314-6141

Publisher

Hindawi

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2017-11-24

Legacy creation date

2017-11-17

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

ARCHIVED Faculty of Medical Science (until September 2018)

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