@article{article_1731209, title={The Role of Inter-arm Blood Pressure Difference in the Diagnosis and Follow-up of Hypertension}, journal={Harran Üniversitesi Tıp Fakültesi Dergisi}, volume={22}, pages={621–621}, year={2025}, DOI={10.35440/hutfd.1731209}, author={Astan, Ramazan}, keywords={hypertension, blood pressure, right arm, left arm}, abstract={I found the study titled “Interarm Blood Pressure Difference as a Predictor of Contrast-Induced Acute Kidney Injury in Patients Undergoing Peripheral Vascular Interventions” by Karaduman et al. (1), published in the Journal of Harran University Medical Faculty, quite interesting. I would like to highlight some key aspects of this well-written study. Recent hypertension management guidelines from Europe, the United Kingdom (UK), and Canada recommend measuring blood pressure (BP) in both arms during the initial assessment of a patient for hypertension. (2–4). Inter-arm BP difference (IABPD) is classified as: <5 mmHg normal, 5–10 mmHg low risk, 10–15 mmHg moderate risk, and >15 mmHg high risk for vascular events (5). IABPD is frequently encountered in patients with hypertension. A systolic IABPD ≥10 mmHg was found in 11.2% of hypertensive patients, 7.4% of those with diabetes, and 3.6% of the general population. Systolic IABPD ≥10 mmHg was linked to increased cardiovascular death, and ≥15 mmHg to all-cause mortality (6). et al. studied the right-left arm BP difference in hypertension detection. They found sensitivity for detecting hypertension was 90.6% when measured in the right arm and 83.4% in the left. Sensitivity was 87.9% and 87.1% in men, and 95.4% and 76.9% in women (7). Similarly, higher BP was observed in the right arm in Karaduman et al.’s study. In conclusion, single-arm measurements may underestimate hypertension prevalence. If double-arm measurements are unavailable, the right arm is preferred, especially in women.}, number={3}, publisher={Harran University}