Research Article

Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience

Volume: 19 Number: 1 January 21, 2025
EN

Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience

Abstract

Objective: Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) is the preferred method for diagnosis of hypertension(HT) in children. Here, we aimed to demonstrate the reasons for ABPM application and incidence of HT, white coat and masked HT in our cohort besides the evaluation of dipping status, biochemical and radiological parameters between the patients with normotension, elevated blood pressure(EBP) and HT. Material and Methods: Twenty-four hour ABPM results of children followed at department of pediatric nephrology and whose office blood pressure measurements revealed HT or EBP and ABPM records of normotensive patients having chronic kidney disease or renal anomalies were evaluated retrospectively. Twenty-four hour ABPM SD score ≥1.96 defined HT while the value between 1.64 and 1.95 indicated EBP. In addition to assessment of blood pressure loads and nocturnal dipping; age, gender, body mass index(BMI), proteinuria, kidney function tests and ultrasound of urinary system were also assessed. Results: Although ABPM was applied to total of 244 patients, 189 of them were included in the study. High casual blood pressure measurements in 108 (57.1%) asymptomatic patients constituted the major group for ABPM application. Total of 57 patients (30.2%) were normotensive, 18 (9.5%) with EBP and 114 (60.3%) were hypertensive. No difference was found in regards of BMI, proteinuria, serum creatinine levels and sonographic results between the groups. Patients with HT and EBP had significantly lower nocturnal dip than normotensive group (p<0.001). However there was no difference in number of patients with inadequate nocturnal fall in all three groups. Conclusion: ABPM should be preferred for definitive diagnosis of HT in childhood. Patients with inadequate nocturnal fall should be evaluated carefully and followed-up regularly as it had been implicated in the development of cardiovascular disease.

Keywords

References

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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

​Internal Diseases

Journal Section

Research Article

Early Pub Date

December 9, 2024

Publication Date

January 21, 2025

Submission Date

May 29, 2024

Acceptance Date

September 16, 2024

Published in Issue

Year 2025 Volume: 19 Number: 1

APA
Aytac, M. B., Doğan, K., Ergül, Ş. A., Malkoç, N. D., & Bek, K. (2025). Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience. Türkiye Çocuk Hastalıkları Dergisi, 19(1), 43-48. https://doi.org/10.12956/tchd.1491856
AMA
1.Aytac MB, Doğan K, Ergül ŞA, Malkoç ND, Bek K. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience. Turkish J Pediatr Dis. 2025;19(1):43-48. doi:10.12956/tchd.1491856
Chicago
Aytac, Mehmet Baha, Kenan Doğan, Şule Ayas Ergül, Neslihan Dinçer Malkoç, and Kenan Bek. 2025. “Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience”. Türkiye Çocuk Hastalıkları Dergisi 19 (1): 43-48. https://doi.org/10.12956/tchd.1491856.
EndNote
Aytac MB, Doğan K, Ergül ŞA, Malkoç ND, Bek K (January 1, 2025) Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience. Türkiye Çocuk Hastalıkları Dergisi 19 1 43–48.
IEEE
[1]M. B. Aytac, K. Doğan, Ş. A. Ergül, N. D. Malkoç, and K. Bek, “Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience”, Turkish J Pediatr Dis, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 43–48, Jan. 2025, doi: 10.12956/tchd.1491856.
ISNAD
Aytac, Mehmet Baha - Doğan, Kenan - Ergül, Şule Ayas - Malkoç, Neslihan Dinçer - Bek, Kenan. “Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience”. Türkiye Çocuk Hastalıkları Dergisi 19/1 (January 1, 2025): 43-48. https://doi.org/10.12956/tchd.1491856.
JAMA
1.Aytac MB, Doğan K, Ergül ŞA, Malkoç ND, Bek K. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience. Turkish J Pediatr Dis. 2025;19:43–48.
MLA
Aytac, Mehmet Baha, et al. “Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience”. Türkiye Çocuk Hastalıkları Dergisi, vol. 19, no. 1, Jan. 2025, pp. 43-48, doi:10.12956/tchd.1491856.
Vancouver
1.Mehmet Baha Aytac, Kenan Doğan, Şule Ayas Ergül, Neslihan Dinçer Malkoç, Kenan Bek. Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring in Children: Single Center Experience. Turkish J Pediatr Dis. 2025 Jan. 1;19(1):43-8. doi:10.12956/tchd.1491856


The publication language of Turkish Journal of Pediatric Disease is English.


Manuscripts submitted to the Turkish Journal of Pediatric Disease will go through a double-blind peer-review process. Each submission will be reviewed by at least two external, independent peer reviewers who are experts in the field, in order to ensure an unbiased evaluation process. The editorial board will invite an external and independent editor to manage the evaluation processes of manuscripts submitted by editors or by the editorial board members of the journal. The Editor in Chief is the final authority in the decision-making process for all submissions. Articles accepted for publication in the Turkish Journal of Pediatrics are put in the order of publication taking into account the acceptance dates. If the articles sent to the reviewers for evaluation are assessed as a senior for publication by the reviewers, the section editor and the editor considering all aspects (originality, high scientific quality and citation potential), it receives publication priority in addition to the articles assigned for the next issue.


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