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- TL;DR
- When my blood pressure is measure by ear, a reasonable value is determined. But 4 different automated models produce the same readings that are more than 30 points too high. Why?
The topic is a mix of physics, fluid mechanics, and medicine.
At work, they have a couple of blood pressure kiosks - that look something like this:
Up till about a year ago, I was using something that I got at a local Walgreen's drug store - it looked something like this:
Finally, my wife has a wrist unit and the local Fire department brought their unit over and described it as "the most expensive automated blood pressure cuff you could find". I have tried all four of these and compared them side-by-side with either what a clinician at my doctors office or an experienced advanced life support paramedic determined by listening.
Consistently, BP values in the range of 150 (as determined by the clinician or ALS paramedic) are being read by these automated machines as over 180 to 190.
It turns out, these automated cuffs use a completely different measurement process than what is heard manually.
The National Library of Medicine has this to say:
Obviously, my arm does not match the model arm that these devices have been designed for.
So, how would you make an arm that at 175 mm Hg will provide no audible beat but will still produce this arterial fluttering?
At work, they have a couple of blood pressure kiosks - that look something like this:
Up till about a year ago, I was using something that I got at a local Walgreen's drug store - it looked something like this:
Finally, my wife has a wrist unit and the local Fire department brought their unit over and described it as "the most expensive automated blood pressure cuff you could find". I have tried all four of these and compared them side-by-side with either what a clinician at my doctors office or an experienced advanced life support paramedic determined by listening.
Consistently, BP values in the range of 150 (as determined by the clinician or ALS paramedic) are being read by these automated machines as over 180 to 190.
It turns out, these automated cuffs use a completely different measurement process than what is heard manually.
The National Library of Medicine has this to say:
Obviously, my arm does not match the model arm that these devices have been designed for.
So, how would you make an arm that at 175 mm Hg will provide no audible beat but will still produce this arterial fluttering?