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"Something squeezing your arm with what feels like the force of a hydraulic press"

It shouldn't feel that crushing. I know it's common, but it shouldn't be. It's lazy/rushed healthcare professionals who only want to take it one time suing an automated machine and crank it to 200mm. If you actually put it at 140mm or take it with a manual sphig, it would read a "normal" person just fine without the crushing. The problem is, the people who are high around 130-140 need the machine at least 20mm higher and would need a retake, which means more time.






I have an automatic at-home blood pressure device, and it does the same thing. Not 200 mmHg, but high enough that I’d freak out if I didn’t know it was normal and would let up soon enough[1]. Did the product designers do that intentionally while still meeting a spec of “not panicking the user in a way that would elevate blood pressure” and getting approved for sale to non-professionals?

It seems like this is genuinely hard to work around in practice.

[1] I recall it being a staple of 80/90s tv, at least Beavis and Butthead, to have a character use an auto blood pressure device and freak out at being so clamped.


One alternative is a cuff that measures on the upswing, rather than the downswing. It does not tend to squeeze quite as hard, because it stops as soon as it has the systolic reading.

e.g. Omron BP7000


I have omron it has been at least 10 points lower then my other ihealth cuff. I even sent it in, they said was fine. Had the dr check it as well. It was always 10 points lower. I read that omron measures differently than the typical bpm.

To my knowledge Omron is considered one of the gold standards for home BP monitoring. Most of their cuffs measure the same old way, the BP7000 is one of the few models that do an upswing measurement. I've had both, along with periodic measurements at the doctor (I also do not get white coat hypertension). The Omrons have been in agreement with all my "official" measurements.

I have a 6-7 year old Omron brand device that doesn't do this. I can always tell right away when my BP is running high because I can feel the machine squeezing harder than normal to get the reading.

There might be a repeatability thing. Always give the full pressure then at least it's one less variable to account for.

Nah. Modern automatic cuffs are adaptive. They tend to first run up pretty low (like 150), see if there is signal. If not then they have to inflate more and more. They tend to determine where to start next time based on the last reading, so if it had the go up to 200 for the last reading it’ll start there next time. If the cuff is a vise, excluding operator error the most likely cause is actually having high blood pressure.

There is another factor that everyone is ignoring here. Some people are just much more sensitive to that kind of pain. If you Lymphadema, or especially Lipodemia, you are much more likely to experience a lot of pain even when a manual sphygmomanometer is being used.

The Omron BP7000 doesn’t hurt me that much, and I measure mine every morning and every evening. But it does hurt my wife, and she has both conditions.




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