1 / 11

Vital Signs/Blood pressure

Vital Signs/Blood pressure. Blood Pressure. Arterial blood pressure is a measure of pressure exerted by the blood as flows through the arteries. (measured by mmHg .) 120/80 mmHg (adults). BP normal limits. Two Types of pressure measures:

Download Presentation

Vital Signs/Blood pressure

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Vital Signs/Blood pressure

  2. Blood Pressure • Arterial blood pressure is a measure of pressure exerted by the blood as flows through the arteries. (measured by mmHg.) • 120/80 mmHg (adults)

  3. BP normal limits Two Types of pressure measures: • Systolic pressure: as result of ventricles contraction. • Diastolic pressure: when the ventricles are at rest. • Pulse Pressure: difference between the diastolic and systolic pressures (normal is 40)

  4. Determinants of BP • Cardiac output • Peripheral vascular resistance • Blood volume • Blood viscosity (Hct. > 60-65%)

  5. Factors Affecting BP • Age (elasticity of the arteries) • Exercise (wait 20-30min) • Stress • Race : African American males over 35 years have higher BP than European males at the same age. • Gender: after puberty, females have lower BP than males due to hormonal variations. • Medications • Obesity: predispose to hypertension. • Diurnal variations: BP lowest early in the morning, then rises during the day • Disease process

  6. Assessing BP • Indirect • Sphygmomanometer and stethoscope • Electronic Sphygmomanometer • Doppler ultrasound • Direct • (Invasive Monitoring) Arterial lines Sites: • Upper arm (brachial artery) • Radial ????? • Thigh (popliteal artery)

  7. Hypertension • Cannot be diagnosed unless an elevated blood pressure is found when measured twice at different times. Types: 2. Primary: unknown cause 1. Secondary: known cause • Associated factors include: arteriosclerosis, smoking, obesity, alcohol, lack of physical activity, high blood cholesterol and stress. • Rx. : treatment of secondary causes, life style changes and monitoring.

  8. Hypotension • Is a BP that is below normal, that is systolic between 85 and 110 mmHg in an adult whose normal pressure is higher than this. • Orthostatic hypotension: is a BP that falls when the client sits or stands. • Causes: drugs, bleeding, severe burn and dehydration • Management : supine position 2-3min., V/s, prevent falls, Rx of the cause.

  9. Oxygen Saturation • Pulse Oximeter: noninvasive device that estimates a client’s arterial blood oxygen saturation (SaO2). • Detects hypoxemia before clinical signs and symptoms • Normal SaO2 is 95%-100% • SaO2 below 70% is life threatening.

More Related