Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well
established that indirect measurements of blood pressure made with
a standard 13cm-wide cuff are erroneously high for large arms and
low for small arms. To correct for this error, the American Heart
Association recommends adjusting cuff width to 40% of the arm's
circumference.
OBJECTIVE: To test the
validity of this method of correction.
DESIGN: This study was
a prospective, nonblinded, paired Student's t-test analysis.
METHODS: Blood
pressures in 50 subjects were measured directly by using a radial
artery line and indirectly by the Korotkov method. For each subject
multiple indirect measurements of blood pressure were made with the
cuff width:arm circumference ratio varied from 30-55% in 5%
increments. Error was defined as indirect blood pressure minus
direct blood pressure.
RESULTS: A ratio of
40% resulted in overestimation of blood pressure for most arms and
with particularly high errors for small arms. The ratio producing
zero mean error for the pooled study group was 46.4+/-0.7%
(mean+/-SEM). Using this ratio of 46.4%, the error varied inversely
with arm circumference (P<0.02), resulting in overestimation of
systolic blood pressure for small arms and underestimation of
systolic blood pressure for large arms. This error is comparable in
magnitude, but opposite in sign, to that which occurs with a
standard 13cm-wide cuff for all arms. The optimum ratio was found
to be closely approximated by the relationship, cuff width=9.34
log(10) arm circumference. Using this relationship, error in
systolic blood pressure was insensitive to arm circumference
(r=0.04, P>0.05) and near zero.
CONCLUSION: The
optimum cuff width for the indirect measurement of blood pressure
is not directly proportional to arm circumference, but is
proportional to the logarithm of the arm's circumference.