Distribution of 24-h ambulatory blood pressure in children: normalized reference values and role of body dimensions : Journal of Hypertension

Journal Logo

Origianl Papers: Blood pressure measurement: Original article

Distribution of 24-h ambulatory blood pressure in children: normalized reference values and role of body dimensions

Wühl, Elkea; Witte, Klausb; Soergel, Mariannec; Mehls, Ottoa; Schaefer, Franz* for the German Working Group on Pediatric Hypertension

Author Information
Journal of Hypertension 20(10):p 1995-2007, October 2002.

Abstract

Background  

Twenty-four-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is an essential tool in the diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring of arterial hypertension in children. The statistical use of pediatric ABPM reference values has been compromised by the non-Gaussian distribution of 24-h blood pressure (BP) in children.

Objective  

To develop distribution-adjusted pediatric ABPM reference tables.

Methods  

From cross-sectional ABPM data obtained in 949 healthy children and adolescents aged 5–20 years, a set of reference tables was developed for 24-h, daytime and night-time mean values of systolic, diastolic, mean arterial BP and heart rate, utilizing the LMS method to account for the variably skewed distribution of ABPM data. Age- and gender-specific estimates of the distribution median (M), coefficient of variation (S) and degree of skewness (L) were obtained by a maximum-likelihood curve-fitting technique. The estimates of L, M and S can be used to normalize ABPM data to gender and age or height.

Results  

Re-application of the established L, M and S values in the reference population confirmed appropriate normalization of ABPM values. Height standard deviation scores (SDS), body mass index (BMI) SDS and heart rate SDS were independent positive predictors of 24-h systolic BP SDS. Diastolic 24-h mean BP SDS showed a weak correlation with BMI SDS only.

Conclusions  

The use of LMS reference tables permits calculation of appropriate SDS values for ABPM in children. Whereas systolic 24-h BP is independently correlated with age, relative height and obesity, diastolic values are almost independent of age and relative height, and weakly associated with relative obesity.

© 2002 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You can read the full text of this article if you:

Access through Ovid