| Literature DB >> 1744674 |
L K Weaver1, S Howe.
Abstract
We describe a noninvasive method of monitoring blood pressure in the monoplace hyperbaric chamber. A standard blood pressure cuff was placed on the patient's arm. A Doppler probe, linked to an ultrasonic Doppler flow detector outside the chamber, was secured over the patient's radial artery. Cuff inflation tubing and the Doppler probe wires were passed into the chamber by modifying a standard disposable hyperbaric intravenous pass-through. Blood pressure readings were determined by inflating and slowly deflating the cuff from outside the chamber while observing the sphygmomanometer within the chamber and listening for the first audible flow signal from the Doppler detector, corresponding to the systolic blood pressure. To minimize the risk of fire in the oxygen-filled monoplace hyperbaric chamber, the patient, Doppler detector, and chamber were grounded. Doppler readings obtained from nine normal subjects whose arterial pressures were being measured with indwelling radial arterial catheters (approved as part of another study by the hospital's Investigational Review Board) compare closely with the subject's blood pressures measured with this noninvasive method: 114 +/- 7.6 mm Hg (mean +/- 1 SD) compared to 112 +/- 8.1 mm Hg, respectively (n = 92 measurements in 8 subjects). We conclude that this noninvasive method of monitoring blood pressure within the monoplace hyperbaric chamber is accurate and suitable for monoplace clinical purposes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1991 PMID: 1744674 DOI: 10.1007/bf01619350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Monit ISSN: 0748-1977