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Apex Nursing

Reference — Med-Surg

Blood Pressure Measurement Reference

A hypertension diagnosis is only as good as the reading behind it. Wrong cuff, wrong position, or a talking patient can swing the number by 10–20 mmHg — enough to mislabel someone. Here’s how to get it right.

Educational use only. Diagnosis and treatment of hypertension are provider-directed and based on properly obtained, repeated measurements. This reference is an educational aid. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Proper Technique

  • Patient rested 5 min, seated, back supported, feet flat (not legs crossed)
  • Arm supported at heart level; no talking during measurement
  • Correct cuff size — bladder ~80% of arm circumference
  • No caffeine, smoking, or exercise in the 30 min before
  • Empty bladder; remove tight sleeve from the arm
  • Take ≥ 2 readings 1–2 min apart and average; confirm a high reading on another visit

Common Errors & Their Effect

ErrorEffect on reading
Cuff too small / too tightFalsely HIGH reading
Cuff too largeFalsely LOW reading
Arm below heart levelFalsely HIGH reading
Arm above heart levelFalsely LOW reading
Unsupported arm / back, legs crossed, talkingFalsely HIGH reading
Deflating the cuff too fastInaccurate (often underestimates systolic)

Orthostatic (Postural) Vital Signs

Measure BP and HR lying, then sitting, then standing (wait 1–3 minutes between positions). Orthostatic hypotension = a drop of ≥ 20 mmHg systolic or ≥ 10 mmHg diastolic (or a HR rise ≥ 20) on standing, often with dizziness — important for fall risk and antihypertensive titration. Have the patient rise slowly and ensure safety during the test.

White-Coat vs Masked Hypertension

White-coat hypertension: high in the clinic, normal at home. Masked hypertension: normal in the clinic, high at home — the more dangerous miss. Home BP monitoring and ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM) clarify both and better predict outcomes.

NCLEX Pearls

  • A cuff that's too small or too tight, or an arm below heart level, falsely RAISES the reading.
  • Have the patient rested, seated with back/arm supported and feet flat, not talking; average ≥ 2 readings.
  • Orthostatic hypotension = SBP drop ≥ 20 or DBP drop ≥ 10 on standing — a fall and medication-titration concern.
  • Masked hypertension (normal in clinic, high at home) is the dangerous miss — use home/ambulatory monitoring.
  • Confirm a high office reading on a separate visit (or with home/ABPM) before diagnosing.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses (AMSN) · Current medical-surgical nursing standards. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →