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Die direkte intraarterielle Methode zur Aufzeichnung des ambulanten Blutdruckes — gegenwärtiger Stand und zukünftige Anwendungen

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Indirekte 24-Stunden Blutdruckmessung

Zusammenfassung

Die indirekte Methode zur Blutdruckmessung nach Riva-Rocci hat sich Scit ihrer ersten Beschreibung kaum verändert. Die Technik ist als ungenau und unflexibel bekannt, ohne daß es befriedigende Erklärungen für die meisten der beobachteten und gemessenen Ungenauigkeiten gäbe (6, 14). Die direkten Methoden zur Blutdruckmessung sind dagegen immer genauer geworden, und sie gelten als besonders präzise und flexibel. Die direkten Techniken sind daher die einzigen verfügbaren Methoden für eine genaue Messung des Blutdruckes. Eine besondere Stellung nimmt die Oxford-Technik, die von Stott et al. (1) in den Laboratorien von Sir George Pickering entwickelt wurde, ein, weil sie die einzige Methode ist, die es ermöglicht, eine genaue Information über die Variabilität des Blutdrucks bei ambulanten Personen zu geben. Diese Technik hat sich als sicher erwiesen (10), ist jedoch invasiv, was ihre Anwendung auf einige Zentren beschränkt, in denen die Sicherheit der Anwendung gewährleistet ist.

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© 1988 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg

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Raftery, E.B. (1988). Die direkte intraarterielle Methode zur Aufzeichnung des ambulanten Blutdruckes — gegenwärtiger Stand und zukünftige Anwendungen. In: Meyer-Sabellek, W., Gotzen, R. (eds) Indirekte 24-Stunden Blutdruckmessung. Steinkopff, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-12055-2_2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-12055-2_2

  • Publisher Name: Steinkopff, Heidelberg

  • Print ISBN: 978-3-662-12056-9

  • Online ISBN: 978-3-662-12055-2

  • eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive

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