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Saturday, June 30, 2018

054 Blood Pressure and Mean Arterial Pressure - Interactive ...
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In medicine, the mean arterial pressure (MAP) is an average blood pressure in an individual during a single cardiac cycle.


Video Mean arterial pressure



Calculation

Total Peripheral Resistance (TPR) is represented mathematically by the formula:mean arterial pressure

R = ?P/Q

R is TPR. ?P is the change in pressure across the systemic circulation from its beginning to its end. Q is the flow through the vasculature (equal to cardiac output)

In other words:

Total Peripheral Resistance = (Mean Arterial Pressure - Mean Venous Pressure) / Cardiac Output

Therefore, Mean arterial pressure can be determined from:

M A P = ( C O ? S V R ) + C V P {\displaystyle MAP=(CO\cdot SVR)+CVP}

where:

  • C O {\displaystyle CO} is cardiac output
  • S V R {\displaystyle SVR} is systemic vascular resistance
  • C V P {\displaystyle CVP} is central venous pressure and usually small enough to be neglected in this formula.

Maps Mean arterial pressure



Estimation

At normal resting heart rates M A P {\displaystyle MAP} can be approximated using the more easily measured systolic and diastolic pressures, S P {\displaystyle SP} and D P {\displaystyle DP} :

M A P ? D P + 1 3 ( S P - D P ) {\displaystyle MAP\simeq DP+{\frac {1}{3}}(SP-DP)}

or equivalently

M A P ? 2 3 ( D P ) + 1 3 ( S P ) {\displaystyle MAP\simeq {\frac {2}{3}}(DP)+{\frac {1}{3}}(SP)}

or equivalently

M A P ? ( 2 × D P ) + S P 3 {\displaystyle MAP\simeq {\frac {(2\times DP)+SP}{3}}}

or equivalently

M A P ? D P + 1 3 P P {\displaystyle MAP\simeq DP+{\frac {1}{3}}PP}

where P P {\displaystyle PP} is the pulse pressure, S P - D P {\displaystyle SP-DP}

At high heart rates M A P {\displaystyle MAP} is more closely approximated by the arithmetic mean of systolic and diastolic pressures because of the change in shape of the arterial pressure pulse.

For a generalized formula of M A P {\displaystyle MAP} :

M A P ? D P + 0.01 × exp ( 4.14 - 40.74 / H R ) ( S P - D P ) {\displaystyle MAP\simeq DP+0.01\times \exp(4.14-40.74/HR)(SP-DP)}

Where HR is the heart rate.


Chapter 14
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Clinical significance

M A P {\displaystyle MAP} is considered to be the perfusion pressure seen by organs in the body.

It is believed that a M A P {\displaystyle MAP} that is greater than 70 mmHg is enough to sustain the organs of the average person. M A P {\displaystyle MAP} is normally between 65 and 110 mmHg. MAP may be used similarly to Systolic blood pressure in monitoring and treating for target blood pressure. Both have been shown advantageous targets for sepsis, trauma, stroke, intracranial bleed, and hypertensive emergencies.

If the M A P {\displaystyle MAP} falls below this number for an appreciable time, vital organs will not get enough oxygen perfusion, and will become hypoxic, a condition called ischemia.


Mean Arterial Pressure Diagram | Olivero
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See also

  • Blood pressure
  • Hypertension
  • Pulse pressure

Accuracy of mean arterial pressure and blood pressure measurements ...
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References


USMLE Cardiovascular System 9 - Mean Arterial Pressure ...
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External links

  • Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator
  • More Information on usage of the Mean Arterial Pressure

Source of article : Wikipedia