Overview

What is high blood pressure?
Blood pressure is a measure of how hard the blood pushes against
the walls of your arteries as it moves through your body. It’s normal for blood
pressure to go up and down throughout the day, but if it stays up, you have
high blood pressure. Another name for high blood pressure is
hypertension.
When blood pressure is high, it starts to damage the blood
vessels, heart, and kidneys. This can lead to
heart attack,
stroke, and other problems. High blood pressure is
called a "silent killer,'' because it doesn't usually cause symptoms while it
is causing this damage.
Your blood pressure consists of two numbers:
systolic and diastolic. Someone with a systolic
pressure of 120 and a diastolic pressure of 80 has a blood pressure of 120/80,
or "120 over 80."
- The systolic number shows how hard the blood
pushes when the heart is pumping.
- The diastolic number shows how
hard the blood pushes between heartbeats, when the heart is relaxed and filling
with blood.
Adults should have a blood pressure below 140/90 mm Hg. High
blood pressure is 140/90 or higher. Many people fall into the category called
high-normal (130–139/85–89). People with high-normal measures need to make
lifestyle changes to bring the blood pressure down and help prevent or delay
high blood pressure.
What causes high blood pressure?
In most cases, doctors can't point to the exact cause. But
several things are known to raise blood pressure, including being very
overweight, drinking too much alcohol, having a family history of high blood
pressure, eating too much salt, and getting older.
Your blood pressure may also rise if you are not very active, you
don't eat enough potassium and calcium, or you have a condition called
insulin resistance.
What are the symptoms?
High blood pressure doesn't usually cause symptoms. Most people
don't know they have it until they go to the doctor for some other
reason.
Without treatment, high blood pressure can damage the heart,
brain, kidneys, or eyes. This damage causes problems like
coronary artery disease, stroke, and
kidney failure.
Very high blood pressure can cause headaches, vision problems,
nausea, and vomiting. Malignant high blood pressure (hypertensive
crisis), which is blood pressure that rises very fast, can also cause
these symptoms. Malignant high blood pressure is a medical emergency.
How is high blood pressure diagnosed?
Most people find out they have high blood pressure during a
routine doctor visit. For your doctor to confirm that you have high blood
pressure, your blood pressure must be at least 140/90 on three or more separate
occasions. It is usually measured 1 to 2 weeks apart.
You may have to check your blood pressure at home if there is
reason to think the readings in the doctor’s office aren't accurate. You may
have what is called
white-coat hypertension, which is blood pressure that
goes up just because you're at the doctor’s office. Even routine activities,
such as attending a meeting, can raise your blood pressure. So can commuting to
work or smoking a cigarette.
How is it treated?
Treatment depends on how high your blood pressure is, whether you
have other health problems such as diabetes, and whether any organs have
already been damaged. Your doctor will also consider how likely you are to
develop other diseases, especially heart disease.
You can help lower your blood pressure by making healthy changes
in your lifestyle. If those lifestyle changes don't work, you may also need to
take pills. Either way, you will need to control your high blood pressure
throughout your life.
- If you have high-normal blood pressure, your
doctor will likely recommend lifestyle changes. These may include losing extra
weight, exercising, limiting alcohol, cutting back on salt, quitting smoking,
and eating a low-fat diet that includes more fruits, vegetables, whole grains,
and low-fat dairy foods.
- If you have high blood pressure without
any organ damage or other risk factors for heart disease, your doctor may
recommend that you take medicine in addition to making lifestyle changes.
- If you have high blood pressure and have some organ damage or
other risk factors for heart disease, you may need to try various combinations
of medicines in addition to making big lifestyle changes.
Most people take more than one pill for high blood pressure. Work
with your doctor to find the right pill or combination of pills that will cause
the fewest side effects.
It can be hard to remember to take pills when you have no
symptoms. But your blood pressure will go back up if you don't take your
medicine. Make your pill schedule as simple as you can. Plan times to take them
when you are doing other things, like eating a meal or getting ready for
bed.
What can you do to prevent high blood pressure?
There are six lifestyle changes you can make to help prevent high
blood pressure:
- Lose extra weight.
- Eat less
salt.
- Exercise.
- Limit alcohol to 2 drinks a day for men and 1 drink a day for
women and lighter-weight men.
- Get 3,500 mg of potassium in your
diet every day. Fresh, unprocessed whole foods have the most potassium. These
foods include meat, fish, non-fat and low-fat dairy products, and many fruits
and vegetables.
- Follow the DASH eating plan (Dietary Approaches to
Stop Hypertension). This diet is rich in fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy
products and low in fat.