Blood Pressure Categoriser
Input systolic and diastolic readings and get WHO category
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About Blood Pressure Categoriser
Understand What Your Blood Pressure Numbers Mean
You have your blood pressure reading - maybe from a home monitor, a pharmacy machine, or a recent doctor visit. But what do those two numbers actually mean? Is 128 over 82 something to worry about? The Blood Pressure Categoriser takes your systolic and diastolic readings and instantly tells you where you fall on the official clinical scale, from normal to hypertensive crisis.
The Two Numbers Explained
Blood pressure is expressed as two values. The systolic number (top number) measures the pressure in your arteries when your heart beats and pushes blood out. The diastolic number (bottom number) measures the pressure between beats when your heart is filling with blood. Both numbers matter, and they can indicate different things about your cardiovascular health.
How the Blood Pressure Categoriser Works
Enter your systolic and diastolic readings, and the tool categorizes your blood pressure according to the American Heart Association / American College of Cardiology guidelines:
Normal: Systolic less than 120 AND diastolic less than 80. Your blood pressure is in an optimal range.
Elevated: Systolic 120-129 AND diastolic less than 80. Not yet high blood pressure, but trending upward. Lifestyle changes can often bring it back to normal.
Hypertension Stage 1: Systolic 130-139 OR diastolic 80-89. Your doctor may prescribe lifestyle changes and possibly medication depending on your cardiovascular risk factors.
Hypertension Stage 2: Systolic 140 or higher OR diastolic 90 or higher. Medication is likely warranted alongside lifestyle modifications.
Hypertensive Crisis: Systolic over 180 AND/OR diastolic over 120. This requires immediate medical attention - contact your healthcare provider or emergency services immediately if you see numbers in this range.
Why Regular Monitoring Matters
High blood pressure is called the "silent killer" for good reason - it typically produces no symptoms until it has already caused significant damage to your heart, kidneys, brain, or blood vessels. Regular monitoring is the only way to catch it early, and understanding your readings is the first step toward managing them.
Home monitoring is increasingly recommended by physicians because it provides more data points than occasional office visits and eliminates "white coat hypertension" - the phenomenon where blood pressure readings are artificially elevated in medical settings due to anxiety. The Blood Pressure Categoriser makes it easy to interpret your home readings between doctor appointments.
Who Should Use This Tool?
Anyone who monitors their blood pressure at home benefits from instant categorization. Home monitors display numbers but rarely explain what they mean in clinical terms. This tool bridges that gap.
People recently diagnosed with hypertension use this categoriser to track whether their treatment - whether medication, lifestyle changes, or both - is moving their readings in the right direction. Seeing a shift from Stage 2 to Stage 1 to Elevated over weeks and months is tremendously motivating.
Health-conscious individuals who want to understand their cardiovascular health baseline can use a single reading to see where they currently stand, even before any concerns arise. Prevention is always easier than treatment.
Tips for Accurate Blood Pressure Readings
Sit quietly for five minutes before measuring. Do not smoke, drink caffeine, or exercise within 30 minutes of taking a reading. Sit with your back supported, feet flat on the floor, and arm supported at heart level. Use the same arm each time.
Take two or three readings one minute apart and use the average. Single readings can be misleading due to normal fluctuations. Tracking multiple readings over days and weeks gives the most accurate picture of your true blood pressure.
Record the time of day alongside each reading. Blood pressure naturally varies throughout the day - typically lower in the morning and higher in the afternoon and evening. Comparing readings taken at similar times produces more meaningful trends.
Instant Answers, Complete Privacy
The Blood Pressure Categoriser runs entirely in your browser. Your health data is never transmitted, stored, or shared. Enter your numbers, understand your category, and discuss the results with your healthcare provider at your next visit.