| High Blood Pressure Issue Page |
High Blood Pressure – or hypertension – is the blood force in your arteries when your heart beats (systolic pressure) and when your heart is at rest (diastolic pressure). High blood pressure is measured in millimeters of mercury (mm Hg).
Whether your blood pressure is normal, high, or normal depends on several factors:
- Blood output from the heart
- The resistance of blood flow within your blood vessels
- Volume of blood
- Blood distribution to your body’s organs
Everyone is different.
According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI), high blood pressure is:
- 120/80 or lower is normal blood pressure
- 140/90 or higher is high blood pressure
- Between 120-139 for the first number (systolic pressure), and between 80-89 for the second number (diastolic pressure) is pre-hypertension
Even though high blood pressure has no overt symptoms you can feel, most cases of high blood pressure are caused by arteriosclerosis and atherosclerosis factors - as well as poor kidney function and obesity - that can be brought under control by diet and lifestyle changes. Occasionally, there are high blood pressure warning signs:
- Headaches
- Seating
- Rapid pulse
- Shortness of breath
- Dizziness
Every report we reviewed suggests that blood pressure can be tied to other health problems, which include:
- Diabetes
- Kidney function problems
- Heart disease or failure
- Previous stroke
- Enlarged heart (genetic or drug-related)
Besides disease, the four main contributing factors for increasing blood pressure are:
- Obesity
- High sodium intake
- Lack of exercise or physical activity
- Stress
Risk factors:
- Race – especially African-Americans
- Low levels of nitric oxide
- Insulin resistance
- People with diabetes, kidney disorders, mellitus, or gout
- People over 55
- Heredity
- Obesity
- Chronic alcohol consumption
- Use of certain medications: women taking oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy and steroids
- Previous or current drug use, especially cocaine
Controlling Blood Pressure:
- Diet – eat low-sodium, low-fat and low-sugar
- Weight loss or maintaining healthy weight
- Exercise
- Stop smoking
- Limit alcohol consumption
- Medications
If you are looking for steps to lower blood pressure naturally:
- Eat good foods and fats and enjoy a healthy, low-sodium, low-fat, low-sugar, high-fiber diet
- Enjoy juice or tea daily
- Exercise
- Aim for a healthy body weight
- Add vitamins, herbs and supplements to your diet
- Drink alcohol in moderation
And avoid:
- Tobacco products of any kind
- Bad foods and fats
- Lack of exercise
- Excessive eating – no more than 2,000 calories per day (depending on height, weight and activity level, this number may vary)
Check out melsTake on medications. What about your high blood pressure and soy, coffee and poultry?
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| melsQuiz answer |
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| melsBuzz |
- By changing your lifestyle you can feel amazing and reduce your high blood pressure. It’s easy to do.
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| melsAdvice |
- Eat snacks that are considered to be whole foods
- Read labels. Not all snacks are created equally
- Avoid the simple carbohydrates found in refined sugars because they lack vitamins, minerals, and fiber
- If you feel like a snack, have a piece of fruit or even enjoy dried fruit
- Avoid packaged cookies like Chips Ahoy! and Oreos. If you want a cookie, go to a local bakery or bake one yourself
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| DidYouKnow? |
- According to the World Health Organization in 2007, high blood pressure is estimated to cause 7.1 million deaths worldwide. There are at least 600 million hypertension sufferers around the globe
- According to the American Heart Association, one in five Americans or one in three adults have high blood pressure, and high blood pressure affects more than 40 percent of all African-Americans
- People with lower blood pressures live longer lives
- High blood pressure affects the brain, heart, circulatory system and kidneys first
- If you are over 65, the lifetime risk of developing high blood pressure is approximately 90 percent
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| melsTips |
- Change your lifestyle
- Strive for your ideal body weight
- Exercise as much as you can
- Eat a lot of grains, vegetables, and fruits
- Stay away from refined foods, sugars, and hydrogenated or saturated fats
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| melsQuiz |
- Does high blood pressure have any visible symptoms?
- High blood pressure is known as the ________killer.
- Do men or women have higher rates of High Blood Pressure?
- The risk of High blood pressure increases after which three lifestyle changes or choices?
- Exercise changes what activity in your body, which allows your blood pressure to be reduced?
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| melsQuiz Answers |
- no
- silent killer because no obvious symptoms until complications develop
- Men
- Menopause, Pregnancy, taking oral contraceptives
- Hormonal activity
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