Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator (Adults)
Formula used (adults): MAP = (SBP + 2 × DBP) / 3
Systolic
Diastolic
MAP (Calculated)
Mean Arterial Pressure – Input Summary
(This printout intentionally shows only the entered SBP and DBP values.)
Copyright@sensingmedicine
“What is Mean Arterial Pressure? Why It Matters for Brain, Heart & Kidney Health?” ➡️ Click here to Read
🩺 Disclaimer
The Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator or MAP Calculator provided on this website is intended solely for educational and informational purposes. It must not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always consult a qualified healthcare professional for any concerns about your health or blood pressure management.
While every effort is made to ensure accuracy, Sensing Medicine and its authors make no representations or warranties about the completeness, reliability, or accuracy of the calculator results.
Use of this Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator and its interpretations is entirely at your own risk. Neither Sensing Medicine nor its contributors shall be liable for any loss, injury, or damage arising from the use of this tool.
⚖️ Terms and Conditions
Purpose: This Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator is offered for educational and general informational use.
Accuracy: The Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator values and interpretations are derived from standard physiological formulas; however, real clinical decisions should only be made after professional evaluation.
Usage: By using this Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator, you acknowledge that results may vary depending on device, input accuracy, and clinical context.
Liability: Sensing Medicine, its developers, or collaborators shall not be held responsible for any consequences arising from reliance on this tool.
Intellectual Property: All design, structure, and educational content are the intellectual property of Sensing Medicine. Unauthorized reproduction or commercial redistribution is prohibited without written permission.
Third-Party Links: The website may link to external sources for educational purposes; Sensing Medicine is not responsible for their content or privacy practices.
Modification: These terms may be updated periodically without prior notice.
🔒 Privacy Policy
No Personal Data Collected: This Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator operates entirely in the user’s browser. It does not collect, store, or transmit any personal health data, IP addresses, or device identifiers.
Cookies & Analytics: No cookies or tracking tools are used within this Mean Arterial Pressure Calculator. General website analytics (if enabled site-wide) are anonymized and non-identifiable.
Data Security: Since no data is stored or transmitted, user input remains private and disappears upon page refresh or exit.
External Links: Clicking any external educational or reference link will direct you to third-party sites, which may have their own privacy policies.
Contact: For any data-related or content inquiries, you may contact Sensing Medicine through the contact form on the main website.
Features
- Health Blogs
- Free Multiple Choice Questions
- Awareness Campaigns
- Authentic Sources
Disclaimer: We do not offer any kind of medical advice in any form. The information in the blog is not replacement of medical, diagnostic, endorsement, treatment, prescription or legal advice. The Blog is for informational purposes only. Although, we try to update but medical science is very vast and evolve at very fast pace. Nothing here should be used as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. We do not endorse any healthcare advice that contradicts a physician’s guidance. Kindly read our policies before reading the website content.
Placement of a link, graphic or text link is to be used only as a marker or reference to various home pages or content (like from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), ATSDR or HHS websites; Ministry of Health and Family Welfare India (MOHFW); World Health Organization (WHO); European Centre for disease prevention and control; NHS or any other). A link does not indicate any form of endorsement or approval from any such source.
- Policies – Click Here
- Full Disclaimer – Click Here
- Terms and Conditions – Click Here
- Contact if any discrepancies – contact@sensingmedicine.com
Information
Follow Us
Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
FAQs
What is Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation?
Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R), also known as physiatry, is an allopathic medical specialty that involves restoring function for a person who has been disabled by disease, disorder, or injury. It provides integrated, multidisciplinary care addressing physical, emotional, medical, vocational, and social needs.
Who is a “Physiatrist”?
A physiatrist is a physician specializing in physical medicine and rehabilitation. (In India: MBBS followed by MD/DNB in PMR.)
What is Rehabilitation?
Rehabilitation is the process of helping a person achieve the highest level of function, independence, and quality of life possible. It does not undo damage but restores optimal health, functioning, and well-being.
Is PM&R only for people with disabilities?
No. PM&R serves anyone experiencing a decline in physical function—from athletes with injuries to elderly individuals recovering from surgery, falls, or pain.
Can physiatrists perform surgery?
Yes. In India, physiatrists perform rehabilitation surgeries such as deformity corrections, tendon transfers, and revision of amputations.
How does PM&R help in managing chronic pain?
Physiatrists use a multimodal approach—evaluation, diagnosis, medication, therapy, injections (e.g., nerve blocks, trigger point/joint injections), and lifestyle modifications—to reduce pain and improve daily function.
What conditions do physiatrists treat?
Common conditions include stroke, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injury, cerebral palsy, amputations, sports injuries, chronic musculoskeletal pain, post-surgical rehabilitation, osteoarthritis, osteoporosis, and more.
Related
Discover more from Sensing Medicine
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

You must be logged in to post a comment.