BP is now measured using automated oscillometric devices (e.g., Dinamap® device) rather than mercury sphygmomanometry. While convenient and widely used, if a raised BP is suspected following use of an automated device, auscultation using a validated manual device (e.g., Accoson Greenlight® sphygmomanometer) must be performed to confirm a suspected raised BP. The British and Irish Hypertension Society keep an updated list of devices validated for use which is available at: https://bihsoc.org/bp-monitors/for-specialist-use.
An appropriate-sized cuff must be used. The width of the cuff should cover at least 75% of the upper arm from the acromion to the olecranon, leaving sufficient space at the antecubital fossa to allow application of the bell of the stethoscope. The widest cuff possible that covers the upper arm should be used. The cuff bladder length must encircle and cover 80-100% of the arm circumference.
Measure the BP with the child in a seated position and their arm gently supported, ideally after the child has been sitting quietly for 3 minutes (or lying supine for an infant). BP cannot be reliably assessed if the child is upset/crying. Ideally, hypertension should be confirmed with an average of three measurements on three separate occasions/days/visits. Measure height and plot on an appropriate gender-specific growth chart to establish the height percentile then refer to the BP centile chart for the appropriate gender. The normative values for BP in children are based on right arm measurements, and BP values measured from the leg should be interpreted with extreme caution. If an isolated right arm BP is found to be elevated, then BP should also be assessed in all 4 limbs to help exclude evidence of coarctation. In coarctation, the BP in the lower extremities is expected to be lower, or sometimes unmeasurable, compared with that of the right arm. The left arm BP may also be elevated if the origin of the left subclavian artery is proximal to the coarctation (occurring in most cases).
Korotkoff phases (for manual assessment of BP):
- K1 corresponds to the systolic BP
- K2 is initial disappearance of the tapping sound
- K3 is return of the tapping sound
- K4 is muffling of the tapping sound, and this corresponds with the diastolic BP in those up to 13 years of age
- K5 is complete disappearance of the tapping sound, and this corresponds with diastolic BP after 13 years of age
- In some children, Korotkoff sounds can be heard down to 0 mmHg, and this excludes diastolic hypertension
Doppler ultrasound assessment of BP is recommended for younger children (particularly <5 years) and for those who are overnight or obese. A Doppler probe is held over the radial or brachial pulse and the BP cuff should be inflated to 20-30 mmHg above where the pulse is no longer audible. The cuff should then be deflated at a rate of 2-3 mmHg per second and the systolic pressure is evident when there is a Doppler phase shift. Doppler assessment cannot be used for the measurement of diastolic BP.
24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is increasingly recognised as useful in the diagnosis and management of hypertension in CYP. It can only reliably be performed in older children (>5 years old) with a minimum height of 120 cm. Normative values for ABPM thresholds exist (2, 3) and the Renal Unit at RHC have an ABPM request form (Appendix 3) and proforma for reviewing and interpreting ABPM data (Appendix 4). At RHC, the request form should be submitted to Ward 1C and the ABPM monitor is fitted there. Families are then expected to return the following day for removal of the monitor. The report is then uploaded and sent back to the referrer for interpretation. Infants and younger children may require admission to hospital for BP monitoring to confirm the diagnosis as reliable BP recordings can be difficult to obtain in this age group. In other units, speak to your SPIN nephrology lead to see if ABPM can be performed locally.
Indications for the use of ABPM in the diagnosis of hypertension include (4):
- Confirming hypertension before drug treatment or assessing BP whilst on antihypertensive treatment
- Diagnosing white coat hypertension (reported in up to 50% of cases suspected on casual BP readings) (5)
- Diagnosing nocturnal hypertension
- Chronic kidney disease (including patients on dialysis)
- Types 1 and 2 diabetes mellitus
- Renal, liver or heart transplant recipients
- Severe obesity +/- obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA)