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Arterial blood pressure monitoring in stroke cohorts: the impact of reduced sampling rates to optimise remote patient monitoring

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posted on 2024-10-14, 11:24 authored by James D Ball, Ronney PaneraiRonney Panerai, Tim Henstock, Jatinder S Minhas
Objective Remote patient monitoring (RPM) beat-to-beat blood pressure (BP) provides an opportunity to measure poststroke BP variability (BPV), which is associated with clinical stroke outcomes. BP sampling interval (SI) influences ambulatory BPV, but RPM BP SI optimisation research is limited. SI and RPM device capabilities require compromises, meaning SI impact requires investigation. Therefore, this study assessed healthy and stroke subtype BPV via optimised BP sampling, aiding sudden BP change identification and potentially assisting cardiovascular event (recurrent stroke) prediction. Methods Leicester Cerebral Haemodynamic Database ischaemic [acute ischaemic stroke (AIS), n = 68] and haemorrhagic stroke (intracerebral haemorrhage, n = 12) patient and healthy control (HC, n = 40) baseline BP data were analysed. Intrasubject and interpatient SD (SDi/SDp) represented individual/population variability with synthetically altered SIs. Matched-filter approaches using cross-correlation function detected sudden BP changes. Results At SIs between 1 and 180 s, SBP and DBP SDi staticised while SDp increased at SI < 30 s. Mean BP and HR SDi and SDp increased at SI < 60s. AIS BPV, normalised to SI1s, increased at SI30s (26%–131%) and SI120s (1%–274%). BPV increased concomitantly with SI. Cross-correlation analysis showed HC and AIS BP sudden change detection accuracy reductions with increasing SI. Positive BP deviation detection fell 48.48% (SI10s) to 78.79% (SI75s) in HC and 67.5% (SI10s) to 100% (SI75s) in AIS. Negative BP deviation detection fell 50% (SI10s) to 82.35% (SI75s) in HC and 52.27% (SI10s) to 95.45% (SI75s) in AIS. Conclusion Sudden BP change detection and BPV are relatively robust to SI increases within certain limits, but accuracy reductions generate unacceptable estimates, considerable within RPM device design. This research warrants further SI optimisation.

Funding

Innovate UK Accelerated Knowledge Transfer to Innovate Grant (AKT2I, Project Number 75)

Medical Research Council Confidence in Concept Grant from the University of Leicester Institute for Precision Health

National Institute for Health and Care Research Applied Research Collaboration funded PhD student

National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Leicester Biomedical Research Centre (BRC)

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Blood Pressure Monitoring

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

issn

1359-5237

eissn

1473-5725

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-10-14

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Ronney Panerai

Deposit date

2024-10-10

Data Access Statement

Individual datasets are not publicly available due to existing data protection guidelines.

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