Wednesday, August 14, 2019

4507 - Blood pressure


Here's a little blurb about high blood pressure from AARP...


More people are being diagnosed with hypertension

The sky-high numbers of Americans with high blood pressure is due in part to the fact that standards changed in 2017. And when the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology (ACC) redefined blood pressure limits, the new, more stringent standards pushed over 31 million Americans from borderline high blood pressure to bona fide hypertension.
"You're now considered to have hypertension if you have blood pressure of at least 130 for the systolic [top] number or 80 for the diastolic [bottom] number,” Lawrence explains. (Previously, the number was 140/90.)
Experts note there is a solid scientific basis and a real need for the lower thresholds: If all American adults over age 45 were able to keep their blood pressure below the new standard of 130/80, it would prevent 3 million strokes and heart attacks over the next decade, according to a 2018 study published in the medical journal Circulation.

'White coat hypertension’ can be dangerous

Sometimes, people who have high blood pressure at their doctor's office actually have normal blood pressure in other settings, such as their home, a condition known as “white coat hypertension.” But although many doctors dismiss it, new research suggests the in-office spike may portend trouble ahead: Untreated white coat hypertension appears to more than double the risk of dying from heart disease, according to a review published in June in Annals of Internal Medicine.
"It may be that patients with white coat hypertension experience a rise in blood pressure whenever they're stressed,” explains Lawrence. If your blood pressure is frequently high in your doctor's office but normal at home, you may want to consider 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, where your physician sends you home with a device that checks your blood pressure every 20 to 30 minutes during the day and hourly at night. This will help your doctor determine whether your blood pressure rises with anything even remotely stressful, or if it's just an in-office occurrence.
Even if your blood pressure seems perfectly normal at your doctor's office, it's a good idea to periodically get your blood pressure checked, either with a home blood pressure monitor or at a walk-in clinic at a pharmacy. “There's a condition known as ‘masked hypertension,’ where your blood pressure is normal at your doctor's office but it goes up at other times of the day or in other settings, such as work or at home,” Lawrence says. Up to 1 in 8 adult Americans may have this condition, according to a 2017 study published in the American Journal of EpidemiologyIf you get an elevated result more than once or twice, talk to your doctor.


1 comment:

John A Hill said...

That's good info, Mike.
Thanks.