china sphygmomanometer (often condensed to sphygmometer[1]) or blood pressure meter is a device used to measure blood pressure, comprising an inflatable cuff to restrict blood flow, and a mercury or mechanical manometer to measure the pressure.A sphygmomanometers usually consists of an inflatable cuff, a measuring unit (the mercury manometer), a tube to connect the two, and (in models that don't inflate automatically) an inflation bulb also connected by a tube to the cuff. sphygmomanometer information   The systolic pressure reading is while your heart is contracting, sending oxygenated blood from the heart to the body, replacing unoxygenated blood. The diastolic pressure reading is the residual pressure when the heart muscles relax and the heart fills back up with blood. These pressures are measured with a blood pressure cuff, also called a sphygmomanometer. China Sphygmomanometer manufacturers The first half of 2007 China's export trade data analysis sphygmomanometer 4 minutes: the treatment of cardiac arrest "Speed" Autumn release more aid "three drugs"
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Sphygmomanometer

1. Position the pressure cuff
Practive the following procedure several times to become
Familiar with the equipment.Before taking your blood to relax
And rest for atleast 15minutes.This will reduce the error due to
Physical activity.If you re-right handed.slip the pressure
cuff over your left arm and extent your left arm palm up
Wheter sitting or lying.be sure that your arm rests at the China Sphygmomanometer
Same level as your heart Turn the cuff so that the stethoscope
Diaphragm (sound head)is on the inside of the arm just above
The elbow.This locates it over the large artery near the hollow
Of the elbow.(thisartery can be also found by feeling for the
Pulse of the artery)Grasp the end of the cuff and pull it snug
Then wrap it around and over your arm,pressing together with
Velcro tape to bind the cuff securely.
2. Inflate the cuff
Feel the pulse of the artery with your fingertis to be sure the
Heads of the stethoscope is located directly over it insert the
Earpieces of the stethoscope (adjust by turning earpieces to fit
Comfortably in your ears)Hold the gauge in your left hand or
Clip onto the chug on the loop providedly for reading .Close the
Air-flow valve on the bulb(turn clockwise)DO NOT
OVERTIGHTEN inflate the cuff by repeatedly squeezing the
Bulb with your right hand.Listen to the pulse beat whilst
Inflating the cuff Watch the gauge.When you can no longe
Hear the pulse beat.raise the pressure an additional 30mm
3. Slowly deflate the cuff
Slowly open the air-flow valve by turning counter clockwise so
That the pressure drops 2-4mmHg with each beat of your heart
(This will usually mean a drop of one to two marks on the
gauge every second)
The rate of deflation is important for accurate reading
Remember,high pressure of the cuff has shut off all blood/.
Flow to the arm So do not leave it inflated fully any longer than
Absolutely necessary.
4. Systolic pressure
After opening the air-flow valve,listen carfully for a pulse
Beat The moment you hear the faint rhythmic tapping or
Thumping sound of the pulse beat,note the reading on the
Gauge.This is your systolic(upper)blood pressure.
It may be different at first for you to detect the sounds of the
Puise beat.listen carefully and acquaint yourself with these
Unfamiliar sounds You should also notice the needle on the
Gauge”bounce”when your systolic pressure is reached.Sphygmomanometer
5. Diastolic pressure
China Sphygmomanometer Allow the pressure to continue dropping at the same rate as
Before2-4mmHg per second Listen carefully with the
Stethoscope The sounds you hear will change the phases.
From the first sharp tagging or thud.they will soften to blowing
Or swishing sounds.Watch the falling needle at the exact
Point when you can no longer hear the sounds, read the gauge This is your diastolic(lower)blood pressure reading

instrument for measuring blood pressure. It consists of an inflatable rubber cuff, which is wrapped around the upper arm and is connected to an apparatus that records pressure, usually in terms of the height of a column of mercury or on a dial. An arterial blood pressure reading consists of two numbers, which typically may be recorded as x/y. The x is the systolic pressure, and y is the diastolic pressure. Systole refers to the contraction of the ventricles of the heart, when blood is forced from the heart into the pulmonary and systemic arterial circulation, and diastole refers to the resting period, when the ventricles expand and receive another supply of blood from the atria. At each heartbeat, blood pressure is raised to the systolic level, and, between beats, it drops to the diastolic level. As the cuff is inflated with air, a stethoscope is placed against the skin at the crook of the arm. As the air is released, the first sound heard marks the systolic pressure; as the release continues, a dribbling noise is heard. This marks the diastolic pressure, which is dependent on the elasticity of the arteries.

Using a sphygmomanometer to measure a person's blood pressure is a routine part of every physical exam and has been for decades. The results a sphygmomanometer provides can assess suitability for certain physical activities, predict long-term health risks, help manage many types of medical problems, and determine eligibility for insurance. The use of a sphygmomanometer has been standard practice in the medical profession for over a century and will only continue to be.
The word comes from the Greek sphygmus (pulse) and manometer, an instrument used for measuring the pressure of liquids and gasses. The sphygmomanometer was invented by Samuel Siegfried Karl Ritter von Basch and first appeared in doctors' surgeries in the 1880s. In 1896, Italian pediatrician Scipione Riva-Rocci introduced an easy-to-use variation of the sphygmomanometer that consistently gave reliable results. Harvey Cushing, recognized in the medical profession as the greatest neurosurgeon of the twentieth century, found Riva-Rocci’s sphygmomanometer on a visit to Pavia in 1901 and soon popularized it.
The modern aneroid sphygmomanometer has an inflatable cuff that is wrapped around the upper arm and inflated with air by repeatedly squeezing a rubber bulb. When the pressure in the cuff gets high enough, blood flow in the main artery of the upper arm is cut off. The air is then slowly released and as the pressure falls, a stethoscope is placed over the artery where the sound of rushing blood is heard. These sounds are referred to as Korotkoff sounds. The pressure at which sound is first heard is the systolic pressure. The last sound heard is the diastolic pressure, the pressure at which the sound disappears as the blood resumes normal flow.

In order to obtain accurate blood pressure results using a sphygmomanometer, it’s important to make note of the following:
1. The inflatable part of the cuff must be the correct size for the arm. It should cover two thirds of the length of the upper arm. A blood pressure cuff that’s too small will cause an abnormally high blood pressure reading and a low reading may result from too large a cuff. The cuff should be firmly placed with the center of the inflatable part over the brachial artery.
2. The cuff must be free of leaks.
3. The mercury should be clean and at the zero mark before use.
4. During cuff inflation, the mercury should rise smoothly and stop immediately inflation stops.
Sphygmomanometer
A sphygmomanometer is an inflatable cuff used to measure blood pressure. It is placed around the upper arm, at roughly the same vertical height as the heart in a sitting person, and attached to a manometer. The cuff is inflated until the artery is completely occluded. Listening with a stethoscope to the braRchial artery at the elbow, the examiner slowly releases the pressure in the cuff. When bloodflow barely begins again in the artery, a "whooshing" or pounding sound is heard (see Korotkoff sounds). The pressure is noted at which this sound began. This is the systolic blood pressure. The cuff pressure is further released until the sound can no longer be heard. This is the diastolic blood pressure. The peak pressure in the arteries during the cardiac cycle is the systolic pressure, and the lowest pressure (at the resting phase of the cardiac cycle) is the diastolic pressure.



  Index
Sphygmomanometer Sphygmomanometers
  Aneroid Sphygmomanometer
  Palm Sphygmomanometer
  Mercury Sphygmomanometer
  Stand Sphygmomanometer
  Accessories
  EMT Kits
   
Stethoscope Stethoscope
  Economic Series
  Sprague Rappaport Series
  Deluxe Series
  Disposable Stethoscope
  Stethoscope Animal Cover
  Accessories
  Name Tags For Stethoscope
   
Stethoscope Thermometer
  Mercury Thermometer
  Digital Thermometer
Stethoscope
Pill Box
  Plastic Pill box
  Pill box Timer
Stethoscope
Neurological Hammer
Stethoscope
Penlight
Stethoscope
Tourniquet
Stethoscope
CPR
Stethoscope
Medical Gift
 
 

 

 

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