Enter Your Blood Pressure Reading

Systolic (top)
/
Diastolic (bottom)
mm Hg

⚠️ Risk Factors (for heart risk estimate)

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer: This tool is for educational purposes only. A single reading is not a diagnosis. Consult your doctor for proper evaluation and treatment.

📋 Blood Pressure Log

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📊 Blood Pressure Categories (AHA 2025)

Category Systolic Diastolic Action
Important: Diagnosis requires at least 2-3 readings taken on separate occasions. White-coat hypertension (high readings only at the doctor) affects 15-20% of people. Home monitoring over 7 days provides a more accurate picture than a single office reading.

Low Blood Pressure (Hypotension)

CategoryReadingSymptomsAction

📐 Blood Pressure Explained

What Do the Numbers Mean?

Format: Systolic / Diastolic mmHg Systolic (top number): Pressure when heart BEATS and pumps blood Reflects cardiac output and arterial stiffness Diastolic (bottom number): Pressure when heart is at REST between beats Reflects peripheral vascular resistance Normal: Less than 120/80 mmHg Optimal: 115/75 mmHg (lowest cardiovascular risk)

Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP)

MAP = Diastolic + (1/3 × Pulse Pressure) = Diastolic + (Systolic - Diastolic) / 3 Example: 120/80 mmHg MAP = 80 + (120 - 80) / 3 = 80 + 13.3 = 93.3 mmHg Normal MAP: 70–100 mmHg Below 60: Organs may not receive adequate perfusion Above 110: Increased cardiovascular risk

Pulse Pressure

Pulse Pressure = Systolic − Diastolic Example: 120/80 → Pulse Pressure = 40 mmHg Normal: 30–50 mmHg Wide (over 60): Indicates arterial stiffness, increased aortic regurgitation risk Narrow (under 25): May indicate heart failure, cardiac tamponade, or shock Pulse pressure widens with age as arteries stiffen.

Lifestyle Changes That Lower BP

DASH Diet: -8 to -14 mmHg (systolic) Weight loss (10 lbs): -5 to -8 mmHg Sodium reduction: -2 to -8 mmHg (under 2300mg/day) Aerobic exercise: -4 to -9 mmHg (150+ min/week) Limit alcohol: -2 to -4 mmHg (under 1 drink/day) Quit smoking: Reduces risk beyond BP alone DASH + Exercise: Up to -20 mmHg combined For Stage 1: Lifestyle alone can often normalise BP For Stage 2: Usually requires medication + lifestyle

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

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