Aswad
Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Rayne58 Aswad we don't trust the automatic BP readings. Master has an irregular heartbeat and those automatic machines do not like that and either just keep pumping and pumping cutting off His circulation or they give some ridiculous off the scale reading Obviously there are cases when the automatic BP readings don't work. For me, though, the manual readings have always aligned with the automatic readings, and I don't have any heart conditions that I know of, or I wouldn't have been on half the meds I've been on. When my automatic meter says 50 over 30 and I pass out and enter a complex partial seizure with no history of epilepsy from an attempt to get up and walk about a dozen feet or so, I'm inclined to assume it's in the right ballpark. Similarly, when it says 240+ over 150+, and I feel my heart trying to beat its way out of my chest along with the sensation that my head is about to explode in a very literal way, when on meds that can cause hypertensive crisis, I'm also inclined to assume that it's in the right ballpark. quote:
We use the manual machines at the hospital and we have just bought our own one to use at home when He is not in pain, so we can get an idea of what His "normal" BP is!  Using a manual machine is definitely preferrable, although some of the automatic ones apparently "listen" for the same sounds you listen for with a manual machine, rather than trying to go by the heartbeats themselves. Since the automatic machine was always in line with the manual measurements, I used the automatic machine to collect baseline data. I'm usually at about 135 over 85 when unmedicated, and about 115-125 over 75 when taking MAOIs, NARIs, stimulants or anticonvulsants. Resting pulse was usually 50-60bpm before the bout of muscle loss, regardless of medication (except with NARIs, where it would generally be 80-95).
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"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind. From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way. We do." -- Rorschack, Watchmen.
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