Avoids 'white
coat effect'
Patients with
high blood pressure should have it monitored at home over 24 hours, the UK's
health watchdog said.
This is in
lieu of visiting a clinic, where measurements can be distorted by the 'white
coat effect' - where the patient experiences an increase in blood pressure
while it is being measured by their doctor. It is thought that up to a quarter
of patients experience white coat effect. This means that patients who have
normal blood pressure on a day to day basis may be misdiagnosed by their
doctor.
In its new
guidelines, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence said
patients whose clinic blood pressure is 140/90 mmHg or higher should wear an
ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) device at home. The monitor straps
around the waist and records several blood pressure measurements over 24 hours.
The
recommendations are based on substantial new evidence, including a paper
published in the medical journal Lancet, which suggest that 24 hour home
monitoring is a more accurate and cost effective way of diagnosing hypertension
than both clinic and home monitoring.
Bryan
Williams, Professor of Medicine at the University of Leicester and Chair of the
Guideline Development Group, said: “The important recommendations in this
guideline will affect the treatment of millions of people in our country and
change the way blood pressure is diagnosed for the first time in more than a
century. “Blood pressure is highly variable so we never use a single reading.
Patients are asked to come in and see their GP on at least 2 further occasions.
But with AMBP, BP is monitoring throughout the day and then an average value is
taken.
“This is done
away from the doctor's office, so it is a more natural environment and the
results are available after a single day.” Professor Williams stressed that
AMBP should only be used for making new diagnoses of hypertension. He added
that the introduction of ABPM would helping save the NHS £10million after 5
years, by reducing the number of unnecessary consultations and treatment.
Professor
Mark Caulfield, President of the British Hypertension Society and a member of
the Guideline Development Group, added: “The cost of treating people with
hypertension is now cheaper than doing nothing. If left untreated, hypertension
will go on to be a greater cost to the NHS through strokes and heart
attacks"
The Family GP
The Family GP
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