For as many as 18 million U.S. adults -- nearly 7% of adults -- at-home blood pressure cuffs are either too small or too large to provide reliable results, according to new findings. Photo by American ...
Cambridge scientists have cracked the mystery of why cuff-based blood pressure monitors often give inaccurate readings, missing up to 30% of high blood pressure cases. By building a physical model ...
About 18 million adults, around 7%, have arms too large or too small for standard cuff sizes The improper fit is likely to return unreliable results for these folks FRIDAY, Sept. 6, 2024 (HealthDay ...
A study explains why cuff-based blood pressure readings systematically underestimate systolic blood pressure. High blood pressure is the most important risk factor for premature death. Yet the gold ...
Researchers demonstrated that speckle contrast optical spectroscopy (SCOS) can be used for cuff-less blood pressure monitoring. The new system can acquire measurements from the wrist or finger.
People are encouraged to monitor their blood pressure at home, but many folks will find that household blood-pressure cuffs are literally a bad fit, a new study warns. For as many as 18 million U.S.
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