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BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

221 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 15273054)

  • 1. Ask the doctor. When checking my blood pressure at home, I always put the cuff on my right arm. Just for fun, one day I put it on my left arm and got a different reading. Did I make a mistake, or can someone have different blood pressure readings depending on which arm is used?
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  • 2. On call. My doctor usually checks my blood pressure in my left arm. When I went for my checkup yesterday, he used my right arm, and the reading was 10 points higher than usual. I asked him to check my left arm, and it was 8 points lower. Does the difference matter? And which is my real pressure?
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  • 3. I am a 64-year-old man with high blood pressure. My doctor always checks my pressure in my right arm, but I've started checking both arms with my own blood pressure machine. My right arm is always 6-10 points higher than my left. Is this normal?
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  • 4. Reactive rise in blood pressure upon cuff inflation: cuff inflation at the arm causes a greater rise in pressure than at the wrist in hypertensive patients.
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  • 6. Sporadic high blood pressure deserves attention. Different readings in doctor's office and at home are cause for concern.
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  • 7. Ask the doctor. Sometimes I take a walk while wearing my blood pressure cuff. For the first few minutes, as I walk at a modest pace, my systolic blood pressure rises from 115 to 130 or so, while my heart rate hardly changes from its usual 60-something beats per minute. But when I start walking faster, my systolic pressure stays steady or sometimes goes down a bit, while my heart rate increases to 110. Is this a normal pattern? Can you explain what is going on?
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  • 8. Ask the doctor. Can I stop taking my blood pressure medicine?
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  • 9. Ask the doctor. I check my blood pressure at home regularly. My readings are all over the place and different from the reading at my most recent doctor visit. Why is my blood pressure so erratic?
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  • 10. Ask the Doctor. I'm 45 years old. At the doctor's office, my blood pressure readings are usually pretty high (the top number may reach 150 or 160), but my home monitor shows numbers more like 130/90. My doctor calls my problem "white-coat hypertension" and reassures me that it isn't dangerous. But it bothers me that my pressure shoots up like that. I have plenty of stressful moments every day, and my blood pressure must be going up then, too. Should I be on medication?
    Lee TH
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  • 11. [Measuring the blood pressure in both arms is subject to discussion].
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  • 12. [Oversized patient arms: a problem with blood pressure measurements].
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  • 13. [Measuring the blood pressure in both arms].
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  • 14. [Measuring the blood pressure in both arms].
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  • 15. Ask the doctors. My initial blood pressure readings in my doctor's office are as as 50 to 60 points higher than measurements taken later. Even at home, it takes two or so readings before the numbers come down. What do you think?
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  • 16. The effect of different body positions on blood pressure.
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  • 17. ["Doctor, would you measure my blood pressure?"].
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  • 18. Measure blood pressure in both arms. A big gap between the two readings suggests a higher risk of cardiovascular disease.
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  • 19. Ask the doctor. I take atenolol and lisinopril for my blood pressure. I have a blood pressure monitor that I use at home and I find that, on average, my pressure is 150/85 in the morning and 130/80 in the afternoon. Should I be worried about the high morning readings?
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  • 20. [Measuring the blood pressure in both arms is of little use; longitudinal study into blood pressure differences between both arms and its reproducibility in patients with diabetes mellitus type 2].
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