Science, asked by aadisimhan69, 7 months ago

6. what is blood pressure? how it is measured​

Answers

Answered by jaiswalradha180
3

Explanation:

Blood pressure is measured in units of millimeters of mercury (mmHg). The readings are always given in pairs, with the upper (systolic) value first, followed by the lower (diastolic) value. So someone who has a reading of 132/88 mmHg (often spoken “132 over 88”) has a. systolic blood pressure of 132 mmHg, and a.

Answered by Anonymous
2

Answer:

The force of circulating blood on the walls of the arteries. Blood pressure is taken using two measurements: systolic (measured when the heart beats, when blood pressure is at its highest) and diastolic (measured between heart beats, when blood pressure is at its lowest).

Blood pressure is measured in units of millimeters of mercury (mmHg). The readings are always given in pairs, with the upper (systolic) value first, followed by the lower (diastolic) value. So someone who has a reading of 132/88 mmHg (often spoken “132 over 88”) has a. systolic blood pressure of 132 mmHg, and a

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