Title: Blood Pressure Measurement
1Blood Pressure Measurement
- Jay Horrow, MD
- Professor and Chair, Anesthesiology
- Drexel University College of Medicine
- Philadelphia, PA
2 3ABA Content Outline Items
- I.B.1.b Transducers
- I.B.8.a Vascular Pressures
- I.B.9.d Pressure transducers resonance, damping
- I.B.9.e Non-Invasive BP Doppler, oscillometry,
Korotkoff sounds, palpation - II.B.1.d Blood Pressure
- Systolic, diastolic, mean, perfusion pressure
- Intracardiac, pulmonary, venous
- Systemic and pulmonary vascular resistance
viscosity - Baroreceptor function
4Outline
- What is blood pressure?
- Physiology of blood pressure
- Invasive measurement techniques
- Noninvasive techniques
5What is blood pressure?
- noun pressure exerted by the blood upon the
walls of the blood vessels and especially
arteries, usually measured on the radial sic
artery by means of a sphygmomanometer, and
expressed in millimeters of mercury either as a
fraction having as numerator the maximum pressure
that follows systole of the left ventricle of the
heart and as denominator the minimum pressure
that accompanies cardiac diastole or as a whole
number representing the first value only lta blood
pressure of frac120/80gt lta blood pressure of
120gt -- abbreviation BP
www2.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwmednlm?bookMed
icalvablood20pressure, accessed 20-Aug-06
6Physiology of blood pressure
Bruner JMR Handbook of blood pressure
monitoring. PSG, Littleton MA, p.52
7Physiology of blood pressure
- All BPs are not created equal
- Arterial Site of measurementWhat the BODY does
to the pressure wave - Technique of measurementWhat our DEVICES do to
the pressure wave - PRESSURE ? FLOW
- Pressure wave travels rapidly in arteries
- Flow lags behind pressure
- Tsunami
- Buoy (or cork) floating in ocean
8What the BODY does
PRESSURE WAVE
Bruner JMR Handbook of blood pressure
monitoring. PSG, Littleton MA, p.57taken from
Hamilton WF, Dow P Am J Physiol 1939 125 48-59
9HOW this occurs
- Resonance in great vessels
- Energy reflection from periphery
10Physiology of blood pressure
- TIME v. FREQUENCY domains
- Continuous, repetitive signal (Fourier)
- Sum of sine waves, varying amplitude
From Bruner JMR Handbook of blood pressure
monitoring. PSG, Littleton MA, p.56 www.cage.curti
n.edu.au/mechanical/info/vibrations/tut1.htm
(20-Aug-06)
11Example Time v Frequency domain
www.answers.com/topic/triangle-td-and-fd-png
12The CV system is a vibrating system
- Periodic energy source
- Resistive impedance to flow (viscosity)
- Capacitive impedance (springiness)less at higher
frequencies - Accepts and stores energy spring
- Elasticity of aorta
- Capacitor in electric circuit
- Inductive impedance (inertia)more at higher
frequencies - Resists change in flow dashpot
- Mass of blood in aorta
- Inductor in electric circuit
13Vibrating systems Resonance
- Resonant (fundamental) Frequency
- Swing analogy T ?(L/g) ? 3 sec f 1/T
- Bay of Fundy 225 deep X 160 mi ? T6 hrs ? 25
tide - Resonant frequency ? pulse rate
- Cymbals or drum v. sound wave
14Resonance in Great Vessels
- fn ? 2- 10 Hz
- Two parallel circuits upper / lower
From Hamilton WF. Handbook of Physiology, 1963,
cited by Bruner JMR, p.59
15Resonance and Reflection
- Resonance in the arterial tree
- fn ? 2- 10 Hz
- Two parallel circuits upper / lower
- Pressure wave has most energy 5 -20 Hz, and CV
system has fn 2 10 Hz ? amplification and
attenuation occur - Abrupt increase in impedance at arterioles ?
reflection
16Impedance Matching
- Transfer of energy
- REFLECTED if low ? high impedance
- TRANSMITTED if matched impedance
- RETAINED if high ? low impedance
- The car analogy
- Back to the body
- Elastic aorta matches impedance of LV
- Mismatch at arterioles ? reflections
- Sea inlet analogy
17Short Review Elastic Aorta
- Minimizes work of the heart
- Low impedance to ejection
- Convert pulsatile flow to a more continuous flow
- Decreases required power (energy)
- Old fire engines same need
- windkessel air chamber
- Store energy at peak release later
- Aorta accomodates stroke volume via elasticity
18Recall
QUIZ Compare areas under the curves do they
change?
19Outline
- What is blood pressure?
- Physiology of blood pressure
- Invasive measurement techniques
- Noninvasive techniques
20How does a transducer work?
From Cliffe P. Transducers for the measurement of
pressure, inScurr C, Feldman S. Scientific
Foundations of Anaesthesia. Year Book, Chicago,
1982, p 40-52
21Two things to remember
From Cliffe P. Transducers for the measurement of
pressure. In Scurr C, Feldman S. Scientific
Foundations of Anaesthesia. Year Book, Chicago,
1982, p 46
22DAMPING
- Tendency to stop oscillating
- Varies with frequency
- Hydraulic systems underdamped (?ltlt0.7)
23How to measure system fn and ?
From Blitt CD, Hines RL Monitoring in
anesthesia and critical care medicine, Churchill,
New York, 1995.
24Hydraulic system also has fn
RESISTIVE viscous drag of fluid CAPACITIVE elast
icity of tubing INDUCTIVE mass of fluid fn ? 10
- 20 Hz (4 tubing no bubbles) Add a small
bubble ? fn lt 8 Hz. RESULT higher BP frequencies
amplified To avoid overshoot push fn into high
region
HOW DO I DO THAT ???
25How to affect fn and ?
Stiffer tubing reduces capacitance.From Bruner
JMR, Handbook of blood pressure monitoring. PSG,
Littleton MA, p. 65
26How to increase fn and ?
- Practically, fluid type fixedHence, use to ?
- stiff tubing both
- small radius ?
- short length fn
- NOTE long tubing degrades system fidelity
From Millers Anesthesia, 6th ed, p. 1201
27Underdamped tracing
From Mark JB. Atlas of cardiovascular
monitoring, Churchill Livingstone, New York,
1998, p 107
28Large Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
fn ? 20 Hz, underdamped
From Bruner JMR, Handbook of blood pressure
monitoring. PSG, Littleton MA, p.81
29Outline
- What is blood pressure?
- Physiology of blood pressure
- Invasive measurement techniques
- Arterial Cannulation
- Noninvasive techniques
30Arterial Cannulation
- Ulnar artery is LARGER than radial
- Allens test gt5 sec is abnormal
- Beware of false positives hand position
- Brachial artery abundant collaterals
- Axillary artery flush precautions
- Complications
- Hematoma nerve compression
- Infection stopcocks (16 contaminated)
- Thrombosis
31Thrombosis of Radial Arteries
From Bedford RD, Wollman H. Anesthesiology 1973
38228
32Recanalization of Radial Arteries
From Bedford RD, Wollman H. Anesthesiology 1973
38228
33Outline
- What is blood pressure?
- Physiology of blood pressure
- Invasive measurement techniques
- Arterial Cannulation
- Noninvasive techniques
34BP Occlusion Techniques
- Palpation
- Flush
- Ultrasound
- Oscillotonometry
- Oscillometry
- Auscultation
- Plethysmography
COMMON LIMITATION Cuff width must match limb
girth
35PALPATION
- Cuff that encircles the limb
- Palpate peripheral pulse
- Limitations
- SYSTOLIC pressure only
- Highly operator dependent
- Rapid deflation ? less precision
- Slower heart rate ? less precision
36Palpation is BIASED (v. invasive)
- Bias a systematic error
- UNDERESTIMATES systolic pressure
- At 120 mmHg, palpation ? 90
- BIAS increases as BP increases
Source van Berger FH et al. Circulation 1954
10 481
37Flush Technique
- Return of color to blanched extremity
- Pediatric use
- Recorded as mean pressure
- Sources of error
- Rapid cuff deflation
- Anemia, edema, vasoconstriction
- Moving subject
- Operator dependent
38Ultrasound Technique
- Flow detection beam along artery
- whoosh begins at systolic
- Arterial wall motion detection
- Systolic BP at 1st sound
- Diastolic BP when 2 sounds merge
- Small children
- Superseded by oscillometric techniques
From Stegall et al. J Appl Physiol 1968 25 793
39Oscillotonometry
Mode A During inflation Pressure in UC Aneroid
at A
Mode B During deflation Pulsations on LC Aneroid
at B
Cannot reverse UC and LC
40Oscillometry a single cuff
Systolic _at_max d/dt(amplitude)Diastolic _at_max
d/dt(amplitude)
41Oscillometry a single cuff
Systolic _at_max d/dt(amplitude) Diastolic _at_max
d/dt(amplitude)
From Ramsey M. J Clin Monit 1979 756
42Oscillometry
- Microprocessor automation ? cuff and monitor
paired - Different algorithms for S,M,D per manufacturer
- Convenient and reliable ? popular
- Correlations with invasive pressure vary by study
- Dysrhythmias can fool algorithms
43Auscultation 5 phases
From Geddes LA. The direct and indirect
measurement of blood pressure. Year Book,
Chicago, 1970.
44Auscultation 5 phases
Described by Korotkoff, 1905 Origins of sounds
still unclear Disagreement persists about
diastole
Phase I snapping sound SYSTOLIC Phase II
murmurs ? IGNORE Phase
IIIthumping Phase IV muffling and Phase
V silence ? DIASTOLIC
Hutton T, Prys-Roberts C. Monitoring in
anaesthesia and intensive care. Saunders, London,
1994, p113.
45Plethysmography
- Pressure in upper arm cuff when
- Pulsatile flow detected on pulse oxs
plethysmographic trace. - Important that device not revert to pulse
search mode in interim - Accuracy (v. invasive) similar to other indirect
methods
46Effect of cuff size
- Von Recklinghausen, 1901
- 5-cm width v. 12-cm width
- Smaller cuff ? higher pressure reading
- Pressure not linear with internal diameter
From Blitt CD, Hines RL Monitoring in
anesthesia and critical care medicine, Churchill,
New York, 1995, p. 118
47Indirect v. Direct SYSTOLIC BP
From Mark JB. Atlas of cardiovascular monitoring.
Churchill Livingstone, New York, 1998, p. 86
48Cuff-related issues
- I.V. / pulse ox are not available
- Skin avulsion
- Petechiae
- Tourniquet effect
- Nerve compression
- apply well above elbow joint
49Review
- BP is like an elephant
- Pressure wave faster than flow
- Direct measurement transducer
- Resonance
- Damping
- Occlusion techniques
50References
- Bruner JMR. Handbook of Blood Pressure
Monitoring. PSG Publishing, Littleton,
Massachusetts, 1978. - Hutton P, Prys-Roberts C. Monitoring in
Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. Saunders, London,
1994, p 105-144 - Mark JM. Atlas of Cardiovascular Monitoring.
Churchill Livingstone, New York, 1998, p 81-126 - Szocik JF, Barker SJ, Tremper KK Fundamental
Principles of Monitoring Instrumentation. In
Millers Anesthesia, 6th ed, Elsevier, 2005, p
1191-1226 - Cliffe P. Transducers for the measurement of
pressure. In Scurr C, Feldman S. Scientific
Foundations of Anaesthesia. Year Book, Chicago,
1982, p 40-52 - Bedford RF, Shah NK. Blood pressure monitoring.
Invasive and noninvasive. In Blitt CD, Hines RL.
Monitoring in Anesthesia and Critical Care
Medicine, 3rd ed., Churchill Livingstone, New
York, 1995, p 95-130 - www.educatorscorner.com/index.cgi?CONTENT_ID2489