Both manual and digital meters are currently employed, with different trade-offs in accuracy versus convenience. File:2020 Sfigmomanometr elektroniczny.jpg|BP 138/73
mmHg as result on electronic sphygmomanometer File:Sphygmomanometer&Cuff.JPG|Aneroid sphygmomanometer with an adult cuff File:Sphygmomanometer.JPG|Aneroid sphygmomanometer dial, bulb, and air valve File:Clinical Mercury Manometer.jpg|Clinical mercury manometer File:Advanced Digital Sphygmomanometer.jpg|Clinical WelchAllyn sphygmomanometer
Manual A stethoscope is required for
auscultation (
see below). Manual meters are best used by trained practitioners, and, while it is possible to obtain a basic reading through
palpation alone, this yields only the systolic pressure. • Mercury sphygmomanometers are considered the
gold standard. They indicate pressure with a column of mercury, which does not require recalibration. Because of their accuracy, they are often used in
clinical trials of drugs and in clinical evaluations of high-risk patients, including pregnant women. A frequently used wall mounted mercury sphygmomanometer is also known as a
Baumanometer. •
Aneroid sphygmomanometers (mechanical types with a dial) are in common use; they may require calibration checks, unlike mercury manometers. Aneroid sphygmomanometers are considered safer than mercury sphygmomanometers, although inexpensive ones are less accurate. A major cause of departure from calibration is mechanical jarring. Aneroids mounted on walls or stands are not susceptible to this particular problem.
Digital Digital meters employ
oscillometric measurements and electronic calculations rather than auscultation. They may use manual or automatic inflation, but both types are electronic, easy to operate without training, and can be used in noisy environments. They calculate
systolic and
diastolic pressures by oscillometric detection, employing either deformable membranes that are measured using differential capacitance, or differential piezoresistance, and they include a
microprocessor. They estimate mean arterial blood pressure and measure pulse rate; while systolic and diastolic pressures are obtained less accurately than with manual meters, and calibration is also a concern. Digital oscillometric monitors may not be advisable for some patients, such as those with
arteriosclerosis,
arrhythmia,
preeclampsia,
pulsus alternans, and
pulsus paradoxus, as their calculations may not be correct for these conditions, and in these cases, an analog sphygmomanometer is preferable when used by a trained person. Digital instruments may use a cuff placed, in order of accuracy and inverse order of portability and convenience, around the upper arm, the wrist, or a finger. Recently, a group of researchers at Michigan State University developed a smartphone based device that uses oscillometry to estimate blood pressure. The oscillometric method of detection used gives blood pressure readings that differ from those determined by auscultation, and vary according to many factors, such as
pulse pressure,
heart rate and
arterial stiffness, although some instruments are claimed also to measure arterial stiffness, and some can detect irregular heartbeats. == Operation ==