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blood pressure
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   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

blood pressure

Pressure, or tension, of the blood against the inner walls of blood vessels, especially the arteries, due to the muscular pumping activity of the heart. Abnormally high blood pressure (hypertension) may be associated with various conditions or arise with no obvious cause; abnormally low blood pressure (hypotension) occurs in shock and after excessive fluid or blood loss from any cause.

In mammals, the left ventricle of the heart pumps blood into the arterial system. This pumping is assisted by waves of muscular contraction by the arteries themselves, but resisted by the elasticity of the inner and outer walls of the same arteries. Pressure is greatest when the heart ventricle contracts (systole) and lowest when the ventricle relaxes (diastole), and pressure is solely maintained by the elasticity of the arteries. Blood pressure is measured in millimetres of mercury (the height of a column on the measuring instrument, a sphygmomanometer). Normal human blood pressure varies with age, but in a young healthy adult it is around 120/80mm Hg; the first number represents the systolic pressure and the second the diastolic. Large deviations from this reading usually indicate ill health.


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Adult School student Shareace Browne takes Rosemary England's blood presure, above, at Thursday's Senior Expo.
Although it has been postulated that patients with cardiovascular disease are more susceptible to air pollution, most of the evidence with respect to heart rate, blood presure, and heart rate variability has been found a populations without cardiovascular disease.
They attribute the blood presure decline to intensified treatment programs for hypertension and to dietary changes such as lower salt intake, a trend made possible when families began preserving their food through refrigeration rather than salting.
 
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