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This screen uses adult reference ranges and is designed for educational screening, not diagnosis.
Example Data Table
| Profile | Height | Weight | BMI | BP Reading | MAP | Pulse Pressure | Overall Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profile A | 168 cm | 63 kg | 22.3 | 118/76 | 90.0 | 42 | Healthy BMI and normal blood pressure. |
| Profile B | 175 cm | 86 kg | 28.1 | 132/84 | 100.0 | 48 | Overweight BMI with stage 1 pressure range. |
| Profile C | 160 cm | 95 kg | 37.1 | 148/94 | 112.0 | 54 | Higher BMI with stage 2 pressure range. |
Formula Used
BMI Formula
BMI = Weight (kg) ÷ Height² (m²)
BMI estimates body mass relative to height. Standard adult categories used here are underweight, healthy weight, overweight, and obesity classes.
Blood Pressure Metrics
Pulse Pressure = Systolic − Diastolic
MAP = Diastolic + (Pulse Pressure ÷ 3)
Blood pressure categories follow common adult screening ranges. MAP helps summarize average arterial pressure during one heartbeat cycle.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter a record label and measurement date for your report.
- Choose metric or imperial units before entering height and weight.
- Add adult age, sex, and measurement context for better record keeping.
- Type your systolic and diastolic readings exactly as measured.
- Press Calculate Now to show the report above the form.
- Review BMI, blood pressure class, MAP, pulse pressure, and healthy weight range.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to save the result summary.
- For repeated abnormal readings, use the output to support a conversation with a clinician.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What does this calculator measure?
It combines BMI, blood pressure category, mean arterial pressure, pulse pressure, and a healthy weight range in one adult screening report.
2. Is BMI enough to judge health?
No. BMI is a screening tool, not a diagnosis. Muscle mass, age, body composition, and medical history can change how useful BMI is.
3. Why does the page calculate MAP?
MAP estimates average arterial pressure across one heartbeat cycle. It helps summarize circulation pressure more broadly than a single systolic or diastolic number.
4. What is pulse pressure?
Pulse pressure is the difference between systolic and diastolic readings. It can help show whether the gap between the two values is narrow, typical, or wide.
5. Are these blood pressure categories for children?
No. This page uses adult screening ranges. Blood pressure evaluation in children and teens depends on age, sex, and height percentiles.
6. Why does the calculator reject systolic below diastolic?
A normal blood pressure reading has systolic pressure higher than diastolic pressure. Reversing them usually means the numbers were entered incorrectly.
7. Can I save my result?
Yes. After a calculation, you can export the current report as CSV for spreadsheet use or PDF for sharing and printing.
8. Should I rely on this page for diagnosis?
No. Use it for education and tracking only. Seek medical advice for symptoms, repeated high readings, unusually low readings, or urgent concerns.