Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Page 1 Sphygmomanometry: The Study of Blood Pressure By Jennifer Louya Throughout history the practice of medicine has been influenced by the scientific technologies of the time. One example of this is the observation of the pulse. Through changes and improvements in technology, researchers began to observe blood pressure in a more accurate manner. Through scientific developments blood pressure measurement went from being qualitative to quantitative—this means that blood no longer had to be physically seen rising and falling in a glass tube to be recorded, but instead could be documented with a noninvasive method that resulted in accurate numerical data.1 As the science evolved, so did the medical instruments. Instruments for recording blood pressure went from being invasive, sometimes harmful devices to being sophisticated, accurate instruments. One of the key devices in this development was the Baumanometer, a device displayed in the Special Collections at the Health Science Library. This instrument was crucial because it made sphygmomanometers more accurate and available to the scientific community. Historians such as N.H. Naqvi and M.D. Blaufox, authors of Blood Pressure Measurement: An Illustrated History, have agreed that Stephen Figure 1: A drawing of Stephen Hales performing his first experiment to record blood pressure. Source: “History of Blood Pressure” (http://www.instantbloodpressure.com/history -of-blood-pressure/) Hales was the first to measure blood pressure. 1 N.H. Naqvi and M.D. Blaufox, “Sphygmography,” in Blood Pressure Measurement: An Illustrated History, New York: The Parthenon Publishing Group, 1998, 31-47. Page 2 Stephen Hales was a clergyman who was interested in botany and physiology. In 1733 he published Haemastaticks, a book that discussed his experiments in the discovery of blood pressure.2 In it, Hales writes: Having laid open the left crural artery about three inches from her belly, I inserted into it a brass pipe which was one sixth of an inch in diameter; and to that, by means of another brass pipe which was fitly adapted to it, I fixed a glass tube, of nearly the same diameter, which was nine feet in length: then untying the ligature on the artery, the blood rose in the tube eight feet three inches perpendicular above the level of the left ventricle of the heart: but it did not attain to its full height at once; it rushed up about half way in an instant and afterwards gradually at each pulse twelve, eight, six, four, two, and sometimes one inch…3 This was the first record of blood pressure. By inserting a glass tube in a mare’s artery, Hales was able to observe the blood rise and fall with each heartbeat, proving there was blood pressure. Hales repeated this experiment several times and with each trial noticed that blood pressure depended on the size and condition of the animals.4 After this initial discovery many scientists started to look into blood pressure measurement and how to improve its accuracy. In 1828, a French physiologist created the haemodynamometer, device that consisted of a graduated U-shaped glass tube filled with mercury called the manometer. Later in 1842, Professor Carl Ludwig, a German professor of physiology, connected this U-shaped manometer to a kymograph and was the first to graphically record blood pressure. Both of these inventions were major improvements upon the first measurement where blood pressure was recorded by using only a glass tube in an artery. In the latter half of the nineteenth century, scientists were still trying to find a way to record blood pressure in a non-invasive manner. In 1877, Samuel Ritter van Basch created a new sphygmomanometer that closed the artery by outside pressure. Blood pressure was found by 2 Naqvi and Blaufox, Blood Pressure Measurement, 49-65. Stephen Hales, Statistical Essay, Containing Haemastaticks, London: Hafner Publishing Co., 1733. 4 Ibid. 3 Page 3 recording the location of the mercury in the glass tube at the first pulse and once more at the final pulse before the pulse could no longer be heard. This was a great improvement because in earlier models of sphygmomanometers the skin was cut and a tube was inserted into the artery.5 As time went on other models of sphygmomanometers were created but it was not until 1896 that the model for modern day sphygmomanometers was invented. Figure 2: Carl Ludwig's kymograph. Source: “History of Blood Pressure” (http://www.instantbloodpressure.com/history-of-bloodpressure/). Scipione Riva-Rocci, an Italian pediatrician, created a sphygmomanometer that used an arm cuff to obstruct the flow of the brachial artery in 1896. This invention marked the start of the modern era of sphygmomanometry. The only major flaw in this design was the width of the armband. Since the original armband was too narrow, the readings were at first inaccurate. Later it was determined that the proper width of the armband is four and a half inches to five inches wide. A band too narrow gave high blood pressures, while bands too thick gave blood pressures too low. This improvement shows that medicine was starting to become more standardized. With physicians now using the same width of armbands, the results were becoming more accurate and 5 Naqvi and Blaufox, Blood Pressure Measurement, 49-65. Page 4 comparable. Unfortunately, with many different models and brands of sphygmomanometers, blood pressure measurement was not yet standardized—not until William Baum’s invention.6 In 1916 William Baum created a highly accurate and portable line of sphygmomanometers that are still used today. William Baum worked at the Life Extension Institute, an institution founded in the United States in 1913 to extend life and prevent disease. There he noticed that the blood pressure measurements made by doctors were Figure 3: Riva-Rocci’s sphygmomanometer. Source: “Other Devices in Sphygmomanometry” (http://vlp.mpiwgberlin.mpg.de/). inaccurate. Due to his frustration with the instruments of the time, William Baum created the Baumanometer, a new breed of sphygmomanometer.7 Baum stated in his application for a patent: Closed end or compromised air or fluid instruments…operate at the expense of accuracy, due to variations in the compressibility of the tube-confined air…the open end instruments problems are…spilling of fluid…adjustable scale whose ‘zero’ mark is required to be brought to the level of the fluid…fluctuation of the fluid column…’air pockets’…breakage…8 The major disadvantage of earlier devices was their need for calibration. This created inaccuracies if the scale was to drift or if the wrong amount of fluid was poured. The Baumanometer, however, did not need to be calibrated. The Baumanometer came in two different models in 1921: the desk model and the wall model. The desk model in 1921 came in a 6 Naqvi and Blaufox, Blood Pressure Measurement, 67-91. Ibid. 8 William A. Baum, "William A. Baum of New York Manometer," United States Patent Office, Application 1594039, filed 8 October 1920; patented 27 July 1926. 7 Page 5 walnut wooden case while the 1924-1926 models came in metal cases.9 One of these Baumanometers can be observed in the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s Health Science Library. On the inside of the device, there is a graduated glass tube containing a mercury ball at the bottom measuring in calibrated millimeters. The glass tube is connected with a rubber hose to a metal cylinder mounted on the inside of the case. This metal cylinder is connected to the rubber pump with a long rubber tube. Another rubber tube connects the rubber air pump to an air pouch inside of the armband. The armband is an olive green while the tubing and the rubber air pump are black. There is a knob on the side of the rubber pump to release air from the armband to find the final pulse. This device stands about a foot tall and is approximately 6 inches wide. The Baumanometer was an everyday device used in both hospitals and offices as well as in homecare. Due to the desk model Baumanometer’s ability to latch shut, it was easily transported. Setup for a Baumanometer was also very easy. All the user had to do Figure 4: The 1921 Baumanometer in UNC Health Sciences Library. Source: Photo by author. was open the case and take out the armband and pump. The device was noninvasive and caused the patient no harm. The armband was tied around the patient’s upper arm above the elbow and inflated to measure blood 9 Baum, “Manometer.” Page 6 pressure. The devices reflected the science of the time. As science and medicine became more about collecting accurate results, instruments were designed to do just that. It was no longer about just getting the results, but actually obtaining correct and standardized results that could be compared to one another.10 Due to the ability to be compared, blood pressure started to be used to detect acute diseases. Blood pressure became more significant to medicine and science due to its availability and easy, quick method of collecting data. Blood pressure has had a large impact on diagnosis and treatment with medications. R. O. Butterfield, a physician in Los Angeles during the 1920s states in a letter titled, “The Sphygmomanometer and the Endocrines”: In the days of our childhood, the old-fashioned family physician used to judge our fever by the pulse rate, and by the sense of touch determined the quality of the pulse or blood pressure. He might or might not have used the stethoscope. Then came the clinical thermometer and other instruments of diagnostic value, but without a doubt the most important one of recent years is the sphygmomanometer.11 Butterfield goes on to say that in some of the infectious diseases of the time arterial hypertension, detected by measuring blood pressure, was a precursor.12 In modern medicine, blood pressure is measured often to detect acute diseases and cure them early on. In history, medicine has been influenced by the scientific advancements and developments of the time. Throughout time the medical instruments of the time evolved with the science. Instruments for recording blood pressure went from being invasive, sometimes harmful devices to being sophisticated accurate instruments.13 This means that blood no longer had to physically seen rising and falling in a glass tube to be recorded, but instead could be documented with a noninvasive method that resulted in accurate numerical data. The Baumometer was 10 Baum, “Manometer.” R.O. Butterfield, “The Sphygmomanometer and the Endocrines,” in Essays on the Internal Secretions, Glendale, CA: The Harrower Laboratory, 1920, 136-146. 12 Ibid. 13 Naqvi and Blaufox, Blood Pressure Measurement, 31-47. 11 Page 7 created in 1916 and is the basis for modern day blood pressure devices because of its accuracy and portability. Due to the availability this new and accurate device, blood pressure measurement began to be used as a precursor to trace some acute diseases.