• Laboratory animal science · Aug 1985

    Non-invasive blood pressure measurement in Yucatan miniature swine using tail cuff sphygmomanometry.

    • C M Cimini and E J Zambraski.
    • Lab. Anim. Sci. 1985 Aug 1; 35 (4): 412-6.

    AbstractA relatively new non-invasive method using a photo-electric flow sensor in non-heated animals, was evaluated for its accuracy in measuring systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) in 40-90 Kg normotensive and hypertensive Yucatan miniature swine. Directly measured SBP, DBP and electronically averaged MAP were recorded from chronic arterial catheters simultaneously with indirect pressures, cuff pressure and tail blood flow under various conditions. In all of the tests tail cuff SBP estimation averaged within 5% of directly measured SBP. The correlation of the two methods was significant (r = .95, P less than 0.01). Over a 60 to 202 mmHg range of blood pressure induced pharmacologically or due to DOCA hypertension, the tail cuff SBP was within 4-10% of directly measured SBP. The tail cuff method was also used to determine DBP and MAP. DBP determined from the tail cuff record was found consistently to underestimate the direct measured DBP by approximately 17%. The two methods were correlated (r = .87 P less than 0.01). The measured tail cuff MAP generally underestimated the direct MAP by approximately 5%. The correlation of directly measured MAP and tail cuff methods was significant (r = .72, P less than 0.01). These results indicated that this system may be used to accurately assess blood pressure in miniature swine.

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