Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAngelica Alexander Modified over 9 years ago
1
What is Blood pressure? HYDROSTATIC FORCE OF THE BLOOD ONTO THE WALLS OF THE BLOOD VESSEL (RESISTANCE)
2
Friction between blood (cardiac output) and vessel walls slows down blood flow (peripheral resistance) When the smooth muscle in the artery or arterioles contract, the vessels constrict, increasing resistance, increasing BP The opposite happens when they relax Any factor causing arteries or arterioles to constrict can lead to increased blood pressure (hormones or nerves) E.g adrenaline, high salt intake, natural loss of elasticity due to age What determines blood pressure What is the equation for cardiac output again? CO=?? x ???
3
Use a sphygmomanometer Cuff inflated to stop blood flow through branchial artery in upper arm First pressure reading taken when cuff begins to deflate (systolic pressure) Second reading taken when pressure falls to where no sound is heard in the artery (diastolic pressure) Measuring blood pressure
4
Branchial Artery
5
© Continuing Medical Implementation …...bridging the care gap
6
3 values; Sys (systole) Dia (diastole Pulse For blood pressure A maximum (systolic) and a minimum (diastolic) pressuresystolicdiastolic
7
Blood pressure changes in the aorta during the cardiac cycle. Measurement of blood pressure using a sphygmomanometer. An inflatable cuff stops blood flow and deflates gradually. The blood starts to flow (detected by a pulse) at systolic pressure. The blood flows freely through the artery (and a pulse is not detected) at diastolic pressure. A typical reading for a young adult is 120/70 mmHg. Hypertension is a major risk factor for many diseases including coronary heart disease.
8
Blood pressure expressed as one number over another e.g. 120 over 80 mmHg Systolic pressure of 120 mmHg Diastolic pressure of 80 mmHg Average healthy person has systolic pressure between 100 and 140 mmHg and diastolic pressure between 60 and 90 mmHg Interpreting blood pressure
9
You will be testing each others blood pressure Draw a table as shown below. Use your instructions to complete the practical Blood pressure practical
10
1. Describe what blood pressure is 2. What do you use to measure blood pressure? 3. What does systolic pressure mean? 4. What does diastolic pressure mean? 5. What is your blood pressure? 6. Are you within the ‘normal range’?! (what is that?) 7. Why is the normal a range and not a specific figure? Blood pressure practical
11
Summarise it....
12
blood pressure diameter diastole hydrostatic force of blood length nerves and hormones Complete concept map using words below number of beats per minute peripheral resistance pulse recoil relax arteriole walls smooth muscle systole
14
Your patient has a blood pressure of 160 over 95 Write a short paragraph to describe: What this blood pressure reading suggests Possible reasons why this patients blood pressure has this reading Some of the other symptoms you might look out for an why
15
Oedema is fluid build up in tissues One sign of high blood pressure Causes swelling and can be associated with kidney or liver disease High pressure at artery end causes fluid to be pushed out of capillary walls (interstitial fluid) Fluid contains plasma and water but NOT red blood cells (why not?) If BP is too high, too much fluid is forced out of capillaries = oedema
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.