Screening and Identification | Graduate Pharmacy Notes
Screening and Identification of Clinical Manifestations of CVDs
Assessment Tools, Measurement Techniques, and Risk Stratification (Based on FIP Cardiovascular Handbook
Learning Objectives
- Implement accurate blood pressure measurement techniques and interpret results according to current guidelines
- Analyze lipid profile components and their clinical significance in cardiovascular risk assessment
- Apply appropriate body composition assessment methods for cardiovascular risk stratification
- Design and implement anticoagulation management services in pharmacy practice
- Utilize validated cardiovascular risk prediction models appropriate for specific populations
- Develop screening protocols for special populations including pregnant women, elderly, and obese patients
Also Read: Introduction of Clinical Toxicology
A. Blood Pressure Measurement
Accurate blood pressure measurement is fundamental to hypertension diagnosis and management. Pharmacists must master both office and out-of-office measurement techniques.
Hypertension Diagnosis Criteria: Systolic BP ≥140 mmHg and/or diastolic BP ≥90 mmHg on ≥2 occasions 1-4 weeks apart (office measurement). Out-of-office thresholds differ (ABPM ≥130/80; HBPM ≥135/85).
Standardized Office BP Measurement Protocol (ESC/ESH Guidelines)
Patient seated comfortably for 5 minutes in quiet room
Back supported, feet flat on floor, arm supported at heart level
Appropriate cuff size (bladder encircling ≥80% of arm circumference)
Initial measurement in both arms; use arm with higher reading for subsequent measurements
Three measurements taken 1-2 minutes apart
Discard first reading; average second and third readings
Document position, arm, cuff size, and device used
Also Read: Pharmaceuticals CAPA Management
| Category | Systolic (mmHg) | Diastolic (mmHg) | Pharmacist Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Optimal |