Estimation of baroreflex sensitivity (BRS) is receiving increasing attention in clinical and experimental cardiology. Until recently, in most studies BRS has been assessed on the basis of invasive blood pressure measurement, which limits its use in large-scale studies and in clinical practice. The development of continuous noninvasive blood pressure monitoring has made it possible to assess BRS noninvasively. We compared central invasive and peripheral noninvasive techniques in the assessment of BRS during cardiac catheterization in 40 patients with possible coronary artery disease. The correlation between noninvasive and invasive BRS was high (r = 0.92; p 80% of the programmed inflations produced valid recordings. Editing criteria accounted for the majority (55%) of invalid readings; weak Korotkoff sounds, imperfect electrocardiogram signals or movement artefact accounted for the remainder. CONCLUSIONS: Version 30/23 of the Accutracker II fulfilled the AAMI criteria; using the BHS system, it was graded A for systolic and C for diastolic blood pressure. Although both protocols were readily combined into one study, they do not assess exactly the same aspects of blood pressure measurement. Previous conflicting evaluations could be due to differences in applying the protocols or may result from modifications in production models. Posture may affect the rating given by the BHS protocol. Until there is general interna!
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