Physiological measurement
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It has been suggested that certain artifacts in blood pressure measurement by auscultation stem from stiffness of the tissues underneath the pressure cuff, resulting in a component of cuff pressure being required to overcome resistance to brachial artery collapse. This paper describes a technique for measuring the pressure required to collapse a segment of the brachial artery which has been isolated from central arterial pressure. This measurement is termed the arterial closing pressure. ⋯ The remaining four required external pressures ranging from 4.6 to 10.7 kPa (35 to 81 mmHg) in order to collapse the artery. Thus arterial closing pressure may frequently be a significant fraction of arterial blood pressure in the elderly population, and may contribute to error in the measurement of blood pressure by auscultation. Arterial closing pressure may be a useful tool for investigating the origin of differences between indirect and direct blood pressure measurements, and also in the investigation of spontaneous arterial closure.