DocumentCode
768346
Title
Blood Pressure Measuring Methods
Author
Shirer, Hampton W.
Author_Institution
General Motors Corporation, Defense Research Laboratories, Warren, Mich.
Volume
9
Issue
2
fYear
1962
fDate
4/1/1962 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
116
Lastpage
125
Abstract
Blood pressure can be measured directly or indirectly. While direct methods provide the maximum quantity of reliable information from probes inserted into the blood stream, indirect methods produce much less disturbance to the subject. Indirect methods are based on the adjustment of a known external pressure to equal the vascular pressure. Systolic and diastolic pressure can be determined intermittently from the pressure that will just collapse the vessel; an approximation of the instantaneous pressure level is obtained from a surrounding chamber adjusted to remove all vessel wall tension. Direct methods can provide continuous, high fidelity recordings of the absolute vascular pressure via a catheter either to transmit the blood pressure through liquid to an external sensor or to carry the signal leads from a miniature internal sensor. External sensors require careful adjustment of the catheter dimensions to obtain optimum dynamic response. Internal sensors provide the maximum dynamic response and avoid acceleration artifacts. Convenience of electrical signal manipulation, display and recording have made electrical transducers increasingly popular.
Keywords
Arteries; Blood pressure; Catheters; Circuits; Electrical resistance measurement; Heart; Laboratories; Pressure measurement; Pulse shaping methods; Shape;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Bio-Medical Electronics, IRE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0096-1884
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBMEL.1962.4322975
Filename
4322975
Link To Document