white coat hypertension

English

Etymology

white coat + hypertension. From the stereotypical uniform of a medical practitioner.

Alternative forms

Pronunciation

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Noun

white coat hypertension (uncountable)

  1. (medicine, idiomatic) Elevated blood pressure measured by a medical practitioner and deemed to result from the patient's emotional response to the medical environment.
    • 1988, T. G. Pickering et al., "How common is white coat hypertension?", Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), 8 Jan.,
      Patients with white coat hypertension did not show a generalized increase of blood pressure lability, nor an exaggerated pressor response while at work. . . . In such patients, the pressor response may be relatively specific to the physician's office and lead to significant misclassification of hypertension.

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