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Please monitor and record your blood pressure at home for 7 consecutive days (unless you have been advised otherwise). On each day, monitor your blood pressure on two occasions- in the morning (between 6am and 12noon) and again in the evening (between 6pm and midnight). On
The NHS has a handy tool to show where your blood pressure is on a chart. High blood pressure. There are three different stages of high blood pressure: Stage one: this is when your blood pressure is between 140/90 mmHg and 160/100 mmHg in the clinic, or 135/85 mmHg to 150/95 mmHg at home. Stage two: this is when your blood pressure is between ...
High blood pressure means that your heart has to work harder to pump blood around your body, so the pressure is always higher than it should be. Your arteries (the blood vessels that carry blood to your organs) are stretchy to cope with your blood pressure going up and down. If you have high blood pressure, your arteries lose
Understanding blood pressure. Leaflet / flyer | 16 pages . We’re here to it make it easier to measure and manage your blood pressure at home. Download your free guide full of all the information you'll need to get started today.
Using this blood pressure chart: To work out what your blood pressure readings mean, just find your top number (systolic) on the left side of the blood pressure chart and read across, and your bottom number (diastolic) on the bottom of the blood pressure chart.
DIASTOLIC mm Hg. (upper number) (lower number) NORMAL. LESS THAN 120. and. LESS THAN 80. ELEVATED.
Home Blood Pressure Monitoring: Treatment Targets Patient Group Clinic Target HBPM Target Hypertension (no co-morbidities) Taken from: NICE CG127, Aug 2011 under 80 yrs <140/90 mmHg <135/85 mmHg over 80 yrs <150/90 mmHg <145/85 mmHg Type 1 diabetes Taken from: NICE CG15, July 2014 <135/85 mmHg <130/80 mmHg Microalbuminuria