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Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP)

MAP from systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Flags hypoperfusion below 65 mmHg. Free prehospital calculator for mean arterial pressure (map). ARC and AHA guide...

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Post-cardiac arrest ROSC, 68-year-old. BP 88/52. The receiving team asks for MAP on handover — you need the number in 10 seconds.

Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP)
Haemodynamics
MAP = DBP + ⅓ × (SBP − DBP) Normal MAP: 70–100 mmHg
MAP <60 mmHg = inadequate cerebral and renal perfusion
MAP ≥65 mmHg is the target in septic shock (Surviving Sepsis Campaign)
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) from systolic and diastolic blood pressure. MAP is the true average perfusion pressure driving blood to organs — more clinically meaningful than SBP or DBP alone. Flags hypoperfusion below 65 mmHg.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

MAP = DBP + ⅓(SBP − DBP) = DBP + ⅓(Pulse Pressure) | Also: MAP = (SBP + 2×DBP) ÷ 3

MAP is weighted toward diastolic pressure because the heart spends approximately two-thirds of the cardiac cycle in diastole. At normal heart rates, the ⅓ weighting reflects this ratio. MAP represents the constant component of arterial pressure that drives flow through the peripheral vasculature. A MAP of 65 mmHg is the widely-used threshold for adequate organ perfusion in sepsis, post-ROSC and haemodynamic shock management.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Normal blood pressure
Given: SBP 120, DBP 80
Working: 80 + (120-80)/3 = 80 + 13.3
Answer: MAP 93 mmHg — Normal perfusion
💡 Normal MAP 70–100 mmHg. No intervention required.
Standard
Post-ROSC hypotension
Given: SBP 88, DBP 52
Working: 52 + (88-52)/3 = 52 + 12
Answer: MAP 64 mmHg — Borderline — below 65 threshold
💡 MAP just below 65 mmHg threshold. Consider vasopressor support. Pre-alert destination.
Advanced
Hypertensive emergency
Given: SBP 210, DBP 130
Working: 130 + (210-130)/3 = 130 + 26.7
Answer: MAP 157 mmHg — Severely elevated
💡 MAP >150 mmHg in context of symptoms = hypertensive emergency. Gradual controlled reduction — avoid dropping >25% in first hour.

4 Sanity check

MAP ≥ 65 mmHg
Adequate organ perfusion threshold
Used in sepsis (surviving sepsis campaign), post-ROSC and haemodynamic resuscitation targets.
MAP < 65 mmHg
Organ hypoperfusion risk
Brain, kidneys, heart at risk. Consider vasopressors, IV fluid, cause-directed treatment.
MAP 70–100 mmHg
Normal adult range
MAP > 150 mmHg
Hypertensive crisis threshold
In context of end-organ symptoms (chest pain, altered consciousness, visual changes) = emergency.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using SBP as surrogate for perfusion Habit — SBP is the most commonly quoted value MAP overestimates or underestimates perfusion depending on pulse pressure Always calculate MAP when assessing haemodynamic adequacy — especially post-ROSC and in sepsis
Targeting SBP >90 instead of MAP ≥65 Older clinical guidelines Permissive hypotension when SBP 90–95 but MAP <65 (wide pulse pressure) Post-ROSC target is MAP ≥65 mmHg per international resuscitation guidelines
Using non-invasive BP in arrhythmia Automated cuff reads incorrectly in AF or irregular rhythms MAP calculation based on erroneous BP Take multiple readings, use manual auscultation, and correlate with clinical signs
Not trending MAP Single measurement only Haemodynamic trajectory missed Calculate MAP at first contact, post-intervention and at handover to track response to treatment