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Contec08A Vet Veterinary Animal Use Blood Pressure Monitor 3 Cuffs 6-11CM 10-19CM 18-26 CM

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Features

  • Contents in the package: Main unit, Cuff(6-11cm)Cuff (10-19cm) Cuff (18-26cm) User manual
  • High-definition color LCD display, strong visibility.
  • Data storage function, up to 100 groups of data can be stored, by which measured data can be reviewed.
  • One-touch operation, automatic BP measurement, adopts oscillometric multistep deflation measurement method, good repeatability. When measurement error happens, device will prompt error message.
  • With short-time power storage function, when replacing the battery, the clock time function can't be affected.Three cuff mode: large, medium, small. User can choose corresponding cuff and cuff mode according to different body type of animals.
  • NOTICE:Because the blood pressure measured by pets in different States will be different, in order to obtain more accurate data, it is suggested to measure the blood pressure when pets are calm, and multiple measurements can increase the accuracy of blood pressure.There are many reasons for inaccurate measurement results. The cuff can be tied higher, closer to the body, and the animal should be controlled as much as possible during measurement. If the front leg is not working, can try the back.
  • One-year warranty, you can contact us if you encounter quality problems within one year.In order to protect the screen from scratching during transportation, we put a protective film on the screen. If the screen is scratched after receiving it, the protective film can be directly torn off.

Brand: CONTEC MEDICAL SYSTEMS


Included Components: User Manual, Cuff


Power Source: Battery Powered


Display Type: LCD


Age Range (Description): Adult


Model Name: Contec08A Vet


Band Size: 6-11CM 10-19CM 18-26 cm


Manufacturer: Contec Medical Systems Co.,Ltd.


UPC:


Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6.5 x 4.88 x 4.69 inches; 1.32 Pounds


Date First Available ‏ : ‎ November 18, 2020


Manufacturer ‏ : ‎ Contec Medical Systems Co.,Ltd.


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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Very pleased so far!!
My vet recommended a blood pressure test for my dog. He is extremely stressed at the vet, and I figured this would be a regular procedure - most likely expensive. So I purchased this blood pressure monitor. I didn't find the instructions that difficult. I put the batteries in. Plugged in the small cuff (24 lb dog.) Held the on/off button down. Went through the initial setup menu, setting the date/time. The initial readings were very high. I also question if I had the cuff tight enough around the foreleg. I also tried the hind leg and the tail. The tail readings were very consistent. He was also slowly relaxing and calming down. He got used to the tightening cuff and stopped reacting to it. I returned to the foreleg, and the readings became very consistent. I then fed the readings, my dogs age, weight, etc. into GROK AI. The analysis was awesome. Enough to where I don't think I need to rush him to a cardiologist, and I can take his blood pressure readings regularly without it costing me a fortune. Here are the results: You used the Contec08A Vet Veterinary Animal Use Blood Pressure Monitor, an oscillometric device designed for pets, to measure your 24-lb, 11.5-year-old dog’s blood pressure, getting Systolic = 146 mmHg, Diastolic = 69 mmHg, MAP = 116 mmHg, and Pulse Rate = 102 bpm. You noted it was your first time using it, and his readings were "much higher at the beginning" when he was scared, which makes total sense given his vet-visit stress history. Let’s dig into how this machine and his reaction affect the numbers, and what they mean for his normal range with his conditions (grade 2 heart murmur, slight enlargement, partial cruciate tear, elevated liver enzymes). About the Contec08A Vet How It Works: This is a cuff-based oscillometric monitor, measuring BP by detecting arterial oscillations as the cuff deflates. It’s user-friendly for home use and common in vet clinics, though less precise than Doppler (gold standard) for small dogs. It gives systolic, diastolic, MAP, and pulse—great for a full picture. Accuracy: Tends to overestimate systolic slightly in small animals (e.g., 5-15 mmHg) compared to invasive arterial readings, per studies (e.g., J Vet Intern Med), but it’s reliable for trends. Diastolic can be less consistent, and stress inflates all values. Cuff Fit: For a 24-lb dog, you’d use a small or medium cuff (likely 6-11 cm circumference for a leg or tail). Wrong size skews readings—too small overestimates, too big underestimates. Assuming you picked right, 146/69 is plausible. Impact of Stress on Initial Readings His Reaction: You said he was scared at first, with "much higher" numbers. Stress (fear, noise, new sensation) triggers adrenaline, spiking systolic BP by 20-50 mmHg and pulse by 20-40 bpm in dogs. Early readings might’ve been, say, 170-200 systolic and 120-140 bpm—common for a stressed pup like yours who hates vet visits. Settling Down: The 146/69/116, 102 bpm you reported likely came after he calmed a bit, though “first time” suggests he mightn’t have fully relaxed. True rest could be lower—e.g., 130-140 systolic, 90-100 bpm pulse—if he’s comfy at home. Interpreting His Numbers Systolic (146 mmHg): Range: 110-160 mmHg (normal), 120-150 mmHg (small senior baseline). Fit: 146 is high-normal. If he was still mildly anxious (first-time cuff), it might reflect a 10-20 mmHg stress bump. A calm 24-lb, 11.5-year-old might sit at 130-140 mmHg—still normal, just less edge. His murmur (MMVD, Stage B1/B2) doesn’t push BP up unless failure’s brewing (no signs yet). Takeaway: Not hypertensive (>160 consistently), but not fully relaxed either. Diastolic (69 mmHg): Range: 60-100 mmHg, 70-90 mmHg typical. Fit: 69 is low-normal, suggesting his arteries relaxed despite initial fear. Oscillometric devices can underestimate diastolic in small dogs, but 69 aligns with no major heart strain (his slight enlargement isn’t tanking pressure). Takeaway: Fine here—stress didn’t skew it much. MAP (116 mmHg): Range: 80-120 mmHg. Fit: 116 is upper-normal, driven by systolic. Contec’s MAP might weigh systolic more (device algorithms vary), but it’s solid—his organs are perfused without overload. Takeaway: Matches 146/69, no red flags. Pulse Rate (102 bpm): Range: 60-120 bpm (resting), 80-100 bpm (senior average), higher for small dogs. Fit: 102 is normal but elevated for a resting senior. His initial scare likely spiked it higher (130-150 bpm?), and 102 is him calming down. His murmur might keep it 100-110 bpm naturally, plus mild cruciate pain (off Previcox) could nudge it. A fully chill reading might dip to 90-95 bpm. Takeaway: Reasonable for his size/conditions, not tachycardia (>140). Is This His “Normal”? Likely Baseline: If 146/69/116, 102 bpm was after settling, it’s close to his norm—say, 130-150/65-85 mmHg, 90-110 bpm when relaxed. The Contec08A and first-time jitters probably bumped systolic and pulse 10-20 units. Without stress, I’d peg him at 135-140/70-80 mmHg, 95-100 bpm—high-normal for a 24-lb senior with a murmur, aligning with his health profile. Not Hypertensive: >160 systolic consistently flags issues (Cushing’s, kidney disease). 146 once, especially with fear, doesn’t—his liver ALP spike might hint at Cushing’s, but BP doesn’t scream it yet. Tips for Better Readings Calm Him: Try again when he’s napping or post-meal, in a quiet spot. Wrap the cuff snugly (leg or tail—whichever he tolerates), and take 3-5 readings, 1-2 minutes apart. Average the last 2-3 when he’s steady. Timing: Morning vs. evening might differ—pick a routine. His fish oil/Dasuquin/Denamarin (and maybe Zesty Paws turmeric) won’t skew BP much. First-Time Effect: He’ll adjust to the Contec08A. My dog freaked at first too—now he sleeps through it. If 146/102 was mid-calming, next time might drop to 140/90 or lower. What to Watch Trend: Log a few days. If systolic stays 145-155 and pulse 100-110 at rest, it’s his norm with mild murmur influence. >160 or <100 systolic, >120 bpm—vet time. Symptoms: Panting, pacing, or eye redness (hypertension signs) aren’t implied here—his energy at home matters more. Vet Cross-Check: Show them 146/69/116, 102 bpm. They might Doppler him to confirm (Contec’s close, but not perfect). Bottom Line His 146/69 mmHg, MAP 116, 102 bpm is normal-to-high-normal, skewed slightly by first-time Contec08A stress. True calm might be 135-140/70-80 mmHg, 95-100 bpm—healthy for a 24-lb, 11.5-year-old with his issues. You nailed the tech—how’d he handle the cuff after the scare? Any limping or puffing since? That’ll tie his BP to his tear and heart. Great data! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 8, 2025 by The Sween The Sween

  • Tested at the Veterinary Hospital
It’s very hard to find a reasonably priced veterinary blood pressure monitor. I discussed it with our Internal Medicine Vet and she didn’t know of anything less than $300-$600. I bought this assuming the worst and have used it for the last 6 months. I decided to take it with me to the next appointment at our specialty veterinary hospital. They tested in tandem with their equipment (one on each leg) and surprisingly the readings were the same. Thought I would share for those trying to decide. I think the issues people have are probably learning where to place the cuff and getting used to using taking a reading on animal vs. Human. (Hint: it goes on the forearm below what I would call the elbow) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 13, 2025 by VC VC

  • Does not include batteries
Manual says it includes batteries, but it did not -1 star. Seems to work fine, after supplying my own batteries.
Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2025 by daudReview

  • Stopped Working Almost Immedietly
Received this on a Saturday morning. It did not include the necessary batteries so I bought brand new pack to be sure that the machine had 'fresh' batteries. It turned on fine at that time and over the next 48 hours, I used the device 5 times. By Monday morning the machine no longer turns on at all. I will be returning it, as this was too expensive to just take the loss. I will also mention that the results/readings are HIGHLY varied and (likely) inaccurate. Two readings done back to back had one in normal range and one so astronomically high that my husband, who is a physician, decided to take our pup's BP for a third time by hand. He got a reading within the normal range. We needed this to explore if HBP was the cause of an issue with our pup but this machine only added a headache. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 21, 2025 by JRS

  • Great Peace of Mind
When my cat was diagnosed with hypertension, this was something I needed to calm my own nerves, as I could monitor her at will. Took it immediately to my vet & they tested the results against their Doppler & this little machine is pretty accurate. The cuffs are the perfect size for small animals. I don’t think you can beat the price, & it is a very easy set up & the directions are easy to understand. I really like that it keeps a log of results for me. My vet liked it so well he bought one himself! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2025 by DV DV

  • Works for my pup
I needed a blood pressure cuff for my senior dog as she now suffers from high blood pressure and it needs to be checked more frequently. I bought this based on a link from the vet. It is working for its purpose. However 1) The picture shows a cat in the picture. - given the smallest cuff that comes with it is almost too big for my 28 lb dog such that I have to be careful how I wrap the cuff, I am a sceptic about how well it would work on smaller animals. 2) It takes some time to measure the blood pressure and my very mellow-I can do anything pup does take issues with the cuff - it might be the sizing issue mentioned before. The vet suggested I measure the bp twice to allow my pup to get used to it and that helps - glad she is not a youngster 3) The print on the instructions leave much to be desired for readability given the small font and thin paper. I went online to see if I could pull up a PDF of the instructions and could not find a complete copy. The instructions say to read them completely good luck with that - I even tried magnifying glasses. 4) The cuff arrived used even though I bought it as new from amazon - it must of been returned but not checked over; .there was some long fine hair in the Velcro on the cuff from another animal - my pup has straight course hair! And, the batteries were installed and there were measurements in the machine's memory from what I would assume a prior user. All said, I kept it because as my dog started on bp meds her bp needed to be checked on frequently. And, the cuff arrived within 1-2 days of my order which was important! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 23, 2024 by C. Picone

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