Back to last page

High Blood Pressure
Basics
How Is Blood Pressure Measured?
dmtContent
Reviewed by the Faculty of Harvard Medical School

How Is Blood Pressure Measured?


Blood-Pressure Measurement

Blood pressure is measured using an inflatable arm cuff with a pressure gauge and a device for listening to your pulse (a stethoscope). Blood pressure is measured as a pair of numbers, representing pressure in millimeters of mercury (often written as "mmHg"). Blood pressure is usually considered high if the top number (called systolic pressure) is above 140 or the bottom number (called diastolic pressure) is above 90. Blood pressure numbers are written as 140/90 and spoken as "140 over 90."

To obtain an accurate measure of your blood pressure in the doctor's office, prepare for the test:


Is Your High Blood Pressure Real?

The decision to start treating high blood pressure is never made after just a single blood-pressure reading in the doctor's office or hospital. (Unless your blood pressure is dangerously high, in which case urgent treatment is needed.) Usually, the doctor will measure your blood pressure on at least two or three occasions. This is because almost anyone can have a single high reading. Your doctor won't diagnose you as having high blood pressure unless your blood pressure is consistently above normal.

If your doctor thinks you are experiencing "white-coat hypertension" (meaning your blood pressure is higher at the doctor's office than at home because you are nervous), your doctor may ask you to check your blood pressure at home using a home blood-pressure machine.



Last updated December 02, 2011