High Blood Pressure
High Blood Pressure Overview
When the heart pumps blood into
the arteries, the blood flows with a force pushing against the walls of the
arteries. Blood pressure is the product of the flow of blood times the
resistance in the blood vessels. High blood pressure is
also called hypertension.
What makes high blood pressure important is that initially it may cause no
symptoms but can still cause serious long-term complications.
- Many people have high blood pressure and don't even know it.
- The key complications of high blood pressure include heart disease, heart
attack, congestive heart failure, stroke, kidney
failure, peripheral artery disease, and aortic aneurysms (outpouchings of the aorta).
- Public awareness of these dangers has increased. High blood pressure has
become the second most common reason for medical office visits in the United
States.
Blood pressure is measured with a blood pressure cuff and recorded as two
numbers, such as 120/80 mm Hg (millimeters of mercury).
- The top, larger number is called the systolic pressure. This is the
pressure generated when the heart contracts (pumps). It reflects the pressure of
the blood against arterial walls.
- The bottom, smaller number is called the diastolic pressure. This reflects
the pressure in the arteries while the heart is filling and resting between
heartbeats.
Scientists have determined a normal range for both systolic and diastolic
blood pressure after examining the blood pressure of many people.
- Those whose blood pressure is consistently higher than this norm are said
to have high blood pressure or hypertension.
- High blood pressure in adults is defined as a consistently elevated blood
pressure of 140 mm Hg systolic and 90 mm Hg diastolic or higher.
As many as 60 million Americans have high blood pressure.
- That's about one in four adults aged 18 years and older.
- Uncontrolled high blood pressure is indirectly responsible for many deaths
and disability resulting from heart attack, stroke, and kidney failure.
- According to research studies, the risk of dying of a heart attack is
directly linked to blood pressure, especially systolic hypertension. The higher
your blood pressure, the higher your risk, even with blood pressure in the
normal range.
- However, the progress of heart disease caused by high blood pressure can be slowed down.
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