The Veterinary Record
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The Veterinary Record 161:418-421 (2007)
© 2007 British Veterinary Association


Papers and Articles

Effect of long-term adaptation on indirect measurements of systolic blood pressure in conscious untrained beagles

S. Schellenberg, MedVet1, T. M. Glaus, DrMedVetHabil, DipACVIM, DipECVIM-ca1 and C. E. Reusch, DrMedVetHabil, DipECVIM-ca1

1 Clinic for Small Animal Internal Medicine, University of Zurich, Winterthurerstrasse 260, CH 8057 Zurich, Switzerland

Correspondence: Correspondence to Dr Reusch

To evaluate the effect of an adaptation period on systemic blood pressure readings, systolic blood pressure was measured in 12 young adult untrained beagles over several weeks by means of a Doppler flow detector and oscillometric devices. The pressure decreased gradually and significantly, and levelled out after 14 days. The median (range) of values obtained by Doppler were 166 (149 to 200) mmHg initially, 145 (119 to 176) mmHg on day 9, 138 (118 to 165) mmHg on day 10, 127 (111 to 139) mmHg on day 35, 124 (115 to 143) mmHg on day 94 and 127 (114 to 142) mmHg on day 161. All the later measurements were significantly lower than the initial measurement. Male dogs had higher blood pressures than females on each occasion. The blood pressure readings obtained with one of the oscillometric devices and the Doppler device were comparable and correlated significantly.







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