Spkit Diagnostics

Ambulatory Blood Pressure Monitoring (ABPM) — easy, accurate, device rental service

Clinician fitting an ABPM cuff on a patient

Device Validation

ABPM trusted by clinicians and used in research—so your readings are accurate and reliable.

ABPM device with cuff and recorder
ABPM monitor and cuff

ABPM Device

A compact, wearable monitor that records your blood pressure over a full 24-hour cycle—including daytime activity and nighttime sleep—so your healthcare provider can view a complete picture of your blood-pressure patterns.

  • Helps patients: Gain more insight into your real-life blood-pressure patterns (including during sleep) beyond single clinic readings.
  • Helps clinicians: Provides high-quality data your clinician can use to guide care decisions.

Disclaimer: This service provides a rental monitoring device and does not diagnose or treat medical conditions. Data should be interpreted by your healthcare provider.

Benefits

Beyond a Single Reading

Like a 24-hour timeline instead of one photo, ABPM reveals day-night patterns and spikes that clinic readings can’t capture.

Affordable & Accessible

Simple rental pricing with fast shipping—so anyone can get professional-grade monitoring at home.

Convenience at Your Doorstep

Door-to-door service keeps things hassle-free—from delivery to easy returns.

Easy for Providers

Clear summary reports you can share with your clinician for quick interpretation and next steps.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common questions about 24-hour blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and how Spkit Diagnostics works with your clinician.

A 24-hour blood pressure monitor is a small device and cuff you wear for a full day and night while you go about your normal activities. It checks your blood pressure at regular intervals, including while you sleep. This is called ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and it gives your clinician a much more complete picture of your blood pressure than a single clinic reading.

A 24-hour blood pressure test can show patterns that a clinic reading cannot. It helps your clinician see if your blood pressure is high only in the clinic, high mainly outside the clinic, or elevated throughout the day and night. This information supports more informed clinical decisions.

Spkit Diagnostics provides doctor-ordered 24-hour blood pressure monitor (ABPM) rentals. After your clinician sends us an order form, you complete the payment process on our website. We ship a validated 24-hour BP monitor to your home, you wear it for 24 hours, then return it using the return label which is included with the ABPM kit. We generate a summary report that your clinician reviews and interprets.

Yes. We provide 24-hour blood pressure monitoring only on the order of a doctor. We do not offer self-ordered testing. Your clinician decides whether you need ambulatory blood pressure monitoring or not.

No. Spkit Diagnostics is not a pharmacy and not a telemedicine provider. We do not sell or ship any medications and we do not provide online medical visits. Our focus is to provide 24-hour blood pressure monitors on rent and clear reports to your clinician for interpretation.

No. We do not provide medical advice and we do not start, stop or change any medications. Our role is to provide accurate 24-hour blood pressure data and a summary report. Only your clinician, who knows your full medical history, can explain what the results mean and decide whether any changes in your care are needed.

We provide a mail-based 24-hour blood pressure monitor rental service across the United States. Once your clinician sends an order, we can ship the ABPM kit to your home address in eligible U.S. locations and include return shipping materials for sending the monitor back after your test.

If your clinician feels that 24-hour blood pressure monitoring could help, they can send us an order form. After we receive it, you can complete the payment process on our website and we will contact you to arrange device shipment, instructions and return details. All clinical questions about your results should be discussed directly with your clinician.