Blood Pressure
Screening
The Health
Clinic conducts blood pressure screenings on both campuses, during
the second week of each quarter. In addition, you may have your
blood pressure monitored anytime during regular clinic hours.
Watch for more details on flyers posted around campus.
High Blood
Pressure Facts
Many people have high blood pressure for years without knowing it. Uncontrolled
high blood pressure can lead to stroke, heart attack, congestive heart failure,
kidney failure, etc.
The heart pumps
blood into the arteries and through the circulatory system. Blood
pressure is the force of blood pushing against blood vessel walls.
It's measured in the arteries and is recorded as two numbers,
such as 122/78.
Systolic pressure
is the top, larger number. It's generated by the heart's contraction.
Diastolic pressure
is the bottom, smaller number. It's the pressure in the arteries
while the heart is filling and resting between beats.
High blood
pressure in adults is a consistently elevated blood pressure
of 140 mm Hg (millimeters of mercury) systolic and/or 90 mm Hg
diastolic or higher.
High blood
pressure means the heart is straining to pump blood. It's unhealthy
because:
- The heart
can become enlarged (congestive heart failure).
- The arteries
can become scarred and less elastic. Hardened, narrowed arteries
may be unable to carry the amount of blood the body's organs
and tissues need.
- Blood clots
may form or lodge in a narrowed artery. Blood clots are one
of several causes of heart attacks and strokes.
- 1.5 million Americans suffer a heart attack every year, and about 490,000
of them die.
- 500,000 Americans suffer a stroke every year, and more than 149,000 of
them die.
As many as
50 million Americans aged six and above have high blood pressure.*
According to recent estimates, one in four U.S. adults has high blood pressure.*
Americans consume
5 - 18 times more sodium than they need. The prevalence of high
blood pressure probably could be reduced if people reduced the
salt used to cook and season food and ate less fast food and
processed food. Many over-the-counter remedies, such as analgesics,
also contain large amounts of sodium.
In about 5
- 10 percent of cases, high blood pressure is a symptom of an
identified medical problem. In these cases, when the root cause
is corrected, blood pressure usually returns to normal.
Uncontrollable
Factors
Age
The older a person gets, the more likely he or she is to develop high blood
pressure.
Race
African Americans have high blood pressure more often that Caucasians. It also
tends to occur earlier and be more severe.
Heredity
A tendency toward high blood pressure seems to run in families.
Sex
In general, men are more likely to develop high blood pressure than women,
but this varies by age and among ethnic groups.
Controllable
Factors
Obesity
Obesity is an excessive amount of body fat. Obesity and blood pressure are
clearly related. That's why all obese hypertensive adults should try to
get within 15 percent of their desirable body
weight for height and gender.
Sodium sensitivity
Reducing sodium (salt) consumption can lower blood pressure in
some people.
Alcohol consumption
Drinking more than one ounce of alcohol a day may increase blood
pressure in some people.
Oral contraceptives
Women who take oral contraceptives may develop high blood pressure.
Physical inactivity
A sedentary lifestyle contributes to obesity.
Common Treatments
- Losing weight
(in the case of overweight people)
- Reducing
intake of salt (sodium)
- Exercise
- Medication
Medication
is usually prescribed in moderate-to-severe cases. A trial period
is often required before the best medication or combination of
medications is discovered. It's extremely important to follow
instruction exactly whenever medication has been prescribed.
*Source: Preliminary
estimates from Phase I of the National Health and Nutrition Examination
Survey III (NHANES III), 1988-91.
~American
Heart Association, 1996
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