The measurement of blood pressure (23/09/13 prac)

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Notes on the physiological basis, methodology, results and importance of the 23/09/13 practical in Human Physiology.
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Note by sophietevans, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by sophietevans almost 11 years ago
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The measure of blood pressure (23/09/13 prac) Arterial blood pressure Sphygmomanometry is the indirect measurement of blood pressure. To do it directly would involve inserting a cannula attached to a diaphragm and transducer into the radial or dorsalis pedis arteries. However, this is invasive. Sphygmomanometry uses the brachial artery because it branches directly off the aorta and can be measured at the level of the heart, so it is considered equal to aortic pressure. When measuring the blood pressure, one hears: ·         The systolic pressure, which is the highest pressure produced when the ventricles contract. This is typically ~120 mmHg and heard as turbulent/noisy intermittent squirting of blood as the high pressure of the cuff is released. It reflects the amount of work the heart is being asked to perform with each beat to generate pressure. ·         The diastolic pressure, which is the lowest pressure produced when the ventricles fill. This is typically ~80 mmHg and it is a continuous, smooth (laminar) flow of blood only allowed when the cuff pressure is lower than diastolic pressure. It is heard as the pulse sounds disappearing – previously the cuff had been inflated above diastolic pressure and so the brachial artery was still closing and opening and creating pulse sounds as blood squirts through. This reflects the state of the blood vessels: both their stretchiness and how much resistance to blood flow there is (to maintain blood pressure). Auscultatory sphygmomanometry – relies on the sounds of blood through the artery. Includes both using a stethoscope, and automatic blood pressure devices containing a microphone, such as the DGS (PC programme in Phys lab which produces graphs). Oscillometric sphygmomanometry – relies on shock waves from the opening and closing of the artery changing the pressure in the inflated cuff as they reach it. Is the more common technique in automatic blood pressure monitoring; includes the Omron and Omega automated blood pressure monitors. We first looked at blood pressure changes by attaching a cuff around the brachial artery and analysing the pulse changes on the DGS. The way the cuff pressure oscillates as the cuff is deflated can be used to estimate systolic and diastolic pressures. We then measured blood pressure manually (using an Aneroid cuff and stethoscope kit). I was unable to find my partner’s pulse, or mine. Next, we used the Omega oscillometric automatic blood pressure monitor. We compared this with an Omron oscillometric automatic blood pressure monitor, but were unable to compare either of the automated methods with the manual. Class data: ·         Using a paired T-test, there was no significant difference between the manual and automated, and between the different automated, methods of measuring blood pressure – EXCEPT in the diastolic manual measurement vs. both the Omron and Omega measurement. One explanation could be slow reaction to sounds disappearing in the manual method. ·         Using an unpaired T-test, there was strong evidence of a difference between male and female systolic pressure, evidence of a difference between male and female diastolic pressure, and no evidence of a difference between male and female heart rates. ·         Using a paired T-test, there was no evidence of a difference in systolic pressure, diastolic pressure, or heart rate when the class held their breath while these measurements were made, than when breathing was normal. This could have been a result of a lack of controlled experimental conditions. Venous pressure Venous pressure is very low (only a few mmHg) because of dissipation of ventricular pressure energy throughout the vascular tree from pressure to heat energy, and the large diameter of the vessels providing little resistance. The normal range is 0-6 mmHg. We measured it by holding our arms at our sides (so the veins in the backs of our hands would fill with blood) then raising and lowering our arms to find the height at which the vessels collapse and refill. We then measured this vertical distance (in mm) from the level of the hand to the heart (4th rib), and converted these mm into mmHg (mm x 12.9, as Hg is 12.9x heavier than blood). Class data: Not available. My results were inaccurate (an average of 7.75 mmHg) as I did not mark the two heights and work out the difference, or ask somebody to help me measure, but rather estimated the difference using a ruler. Pathologies High arterial/venous blood pressure: high intrathoracic pressure, arterial stenosis, hypervolaemia, obstruction, heart failure. Low arterial/venous blood pressure: hypovolaemia, low intrathoracic pressure.

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