Determination of Human Blood Pressure Using a Sphygmomanometer

References

  1. Williams, J. S., Brown, S., & Conlin, P. R. (2009). Videos in clinical medicine blood pressure measurement. The New England journal of medicine, 360(5), e6.

  2. Beevers, G., Lip, G. Y., & O'Brien, E. ABC of hypertension: Blood pressure.

  3. Shahbabu, B., Dasgupta, A., Sarkar, K., & Sahoo, S. K. (2016). Which is more accurate in measuring the blood pressure? A digital or an aneroid sphygmomanometer. Journal of clinical and diagnostic research: JCDR, 10(3), LC11.

  4. Canzanello, Vincent J., Patricia L. Jensen, and Gary L. Schwartz. "Are aneroid sphygmomanometers accurate in hospital and clinic settings?." Archives of Internal Medicine 161, no. 5 (2001): 729-731.

  5. Bailey, R. H., Knaus, V. L., & Bauer, J. H. (1991). Aneroid sphygmomanometers: an assessment of accuracy at a university hospital and clinics. Archives of Internal Medicine, 151(7), 1409-1412.

  6. Giles, T. D., Berk, B. C., Black, H. R., Cohn, J. N., Kostis, J. B., Izzo Jr, J. L., & Weber, M. A. (2005). Expanding the definition and classification of hypertension. The Journal of Clinical Hypertension, 7(9), 505-512.

  7. Eastridge, B.J., Salinas, J., McManus, J.G., Blackburn, L., Bugler, E.M., Cooke, W.H., Concertino, V.A., Wade, C.E. and Holcomb, J.B., 2007. Hypotension begins at 110 mm Hg: redefining “hypotension” with data. Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery, 63(2), pp.291-299.