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Sphygmomanometer
An instrument for measuring blood pressure, particularly in arteries. The two types of sphygmomanometers are a mercury column and a gauge with a dial face. The sphygmomanometer in most frequent use today consists of a gauge attached to a rubber cuff which is wrapped around the upper arm and is inflated to constrict the arteries. A blood pressure reading consists of two numbers: systolic and diastolic. Systolic refers to systole, the phase when the heart pumps blood out into the aorta. Diastolic refers to diastole, the resting period when the heart refills with blood. At each heartbeat, blood pressure is raised to the systolic level, and, between beats, it drops to the diastolic level. With the cuff inflated with air, a stethoscope is placed over an artery (the brachial artery) in the crook of the arm. As the air in the cuff is released, the first sound heard through the stethescope marks the systolic pressure. As the release of air from the cuff continues, a point is reached when the sound diminishes and then is no longer heard. The point where the sound disappears marks the diastolic pressure. The blood pressure reading might show the systolic and diastolic pressures to be, for example, 120 and 78mm of mercury (Hg) respectively — written 120/78 and said to be "120 over 78." A typical blood pressure reading for an adult might, in fact, be 120/78. Readings vary depending on age and many other factors. Children and adults with smaller or larger than average-sized arms may need special-sized pressure cuffs. The sphygmomanometer was introduced in 18896 by the Italian physician Scipione Riva-Rocci (1863-1937). The American physiologist Joseph Erlanger (1874-1965) studied the principles of sphygmomanometry and devised a recording sphygmomanometer. The word "sphygmomanometer" (pronounced sfig·mo·ma·nom·e·ter) was put together from the Greek sphygmos, the beating of the heart or the pulse + manometer, a device for measuring pressure or tension.
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An instrument for measuring arterial blood pressure consisting of an inflatable cuff, inflating bulb, and a gauge showing the blood pressure. SYN: sphygmometer. [sphygmo- + G. manos, thin, scanty, + metron, measure]
- Mosso s. an apparatus for measuring the blood pressure in the digital arteries.
- Riva-Rocci s. the original blood pressure apparatus first used to noninvasively measure arterial pressure.
- Rogers s. an s. with an aneroid barometer gauge.

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sphyg·mo·ma·nom·e·ter .sfig-mō-mə-'näm-ət-ər n an instrument for measuring blood pressure and esp. arterial blood pressure

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n.
an instrument for measuring blood pressure in the arteries. It consists of an inflatable cuff connected via a rubber tube to a column of mercury with a graduated scale. The cuff is applied to a limb (usually the arm) and inflated to exert pressure on a large artery until the blood flow stops. The pressure is then slowly released and, with the aid of a stethoscope to listen to the pulse, it is possible to determine both the systolic and diastolic pressures (which can be read on the scale).

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sphyg·mo·ma·nom·e·ter (sfig″mo-mə-nomґə-tər) an instrument for measuring blood pressure in the arteries. There are many forms of the instrument, often named for the person who devised them, such as Riva-Rocci s., Faught s., Erlanger s., Janeway s., Mosso s., Rogers s., Stanton s., Tycos s.

Medical dictionary. 2011.