Formula and why it isn't (SBP + DBP) / 2
MAP = (SBP + 2 × DBP) ÷ 3
The heart spends roughly twice as long in diastole as in systole during a normal-rate cycle, so a simple average overweights the systolic peak. Multiplying DBP by 2 corrects for that. At very high heart rates (≥120 bpm), the ratio shifts and arterial-line MAP becomes more accurate than the cuff estimate.
Perfusion thresholds — what to do when MAP drops
- MAP ≥ 65 mmHg — minimum target for organ perfusion in sepsis, septic shock, and most adult ICU patients (Surviving Sepsis Campaign).
- MAP ≥ 80–90 mmHg — used in TBI and post-stroke to maintain cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP = MAP − ICP).
- MAP 60–65 mmHg — concerning. Reassess fluid status, pull labs, notify provider.
- MAP < 60 mmHg — emergency. Vasopressor titration, fluid bolus per protocol, escalate.
NCLEX trap: A blood pressure of 90/50 looks "OK" at a glance, but MAP = (90 + 100) / 3 = 63. That's below the 65 perfusion floor — it's not stable, it's pre-shock.
Worked example
BP 110/70:
- (110 + 140) / 3 = 250 / 3 = 83.3 mmHg.
- Above the ≥65 sepsis target. Adequate for organ perfusion in most adult contexts.
Common pitfalls
- Reading the displayed MAP from the cuff and assuming it's correct. Cuff MAPs over-read at high heart rates and arrhythmias — confirm with arterial line in critically ill patients.
- Ignoring trend. A MAP of 70 that just dropped from 90 is more dangerous than a stable 65.
- Not reassessing after intervention. Recheck MAP within minutes of fluid bolus or vasopressor titration, not at the next vitals window.
Practice hemodynamic priorities in NCLEX context
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