A blood pressure measures the amount of pressure on your arteries when your heart is pumping and contracting blood. There are two measurements. One is the diastolic. The diastolic is the measurement of the pressure on your arteries when your heart is relaxed. This number should be low, in between 50 and 90. It is the bottom number in the ratio. The systolic measurement is the top number in the ratio. The systolic measurement is the amount of pressure on the arteries when the heart is beating or contracted. This number should be between 100 and 150. The text book normal blood pressure is 120/80=S/D. hope that helps.
my pressure went up to 170/110....I dont have a history of BP and never was that that high before. I am 45 year old woman and not pregnant. I dont smoke or drink. Why? Can it be dangerous? Ramla my pressure went up to 170/110....I dont have a history of BP and never was that that high before. I am 45 year old woman and not pregnant. I dont smoke or drink. Why? Can it be dangerous? Ramla my pressure went up to 170/110....I dont have a history of BP and never was that that high before. I am 45 year old woman and not pregnant. I dont smoke or drink. Why? Can it be dangerous? Ramla
Hurry up and find a doctor
hurry up and answer
That would also depend on the length of the pipe, and on how fast you want the water to move. If you are in no hurry, even the slightest pressure will be enough to push the water through the pipe.That would also depend on the length of the pipe, and on how fast you want the water to move. If you are in no hurry, even the slightest pressure will be enough to push the water through the pipe.That would also depend on the length of the pipe, and on how fast you want the water to move. If you are in no hurry, even the slightest pressure will be enough to push the water through the pipe.That would also depend on the length of the pipe, and on how fast you want the water to move. If you are in no hurry, even the slightest pressure will be enough to push the water through the pipe.
it comes out tommorrow, you better hurry up
ed
We make mistakes when we are in a hurry.
I had to hurry to catch the bus before it left the stop.
The pressure that bothers people most at work, if how they need to hurry to make sure that everything is finished, and that the work is done precisely, and you have made sure that you have not forgotten anything.
The word hurry is both a noun and a verb (hurry, hurries, hurrying, hurried). Example uses: Noun: She left in a hurry. Verb: You must hurry to catch that flight.
You Can't Hurry Love by The Supremes
"Hurry" is a noun in the sentence, "He can disappear in a hurry." A clear indication that "hurry" is a noun is that it has the indefinite article "a" before it, and articles are used only with nouns.