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Fall 2006
Do I Really Need a Blood Pressure Drug?
If you have hypertension, treatment can make all the difference in your future health
Your doctor just told you that you have high blood pressure. In one way, you’re lucky—nearly one in three American adults has hypertension, but many aren’t even aware of it. “That’s why high blood pressure is known as the silent killer,” says family medicine physician Henry Liu, M.D., of Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network.
In some cases, lifestyle change—including exercise, weight loss, lower salt intake and quitting smoking—may resolve the problem. But bad habits are hard to break, Liu says, and heredity also plays a role. When all’s said and done, many people need a drug to control their blood pressure.
If that’s the case with you, resist the temptation to stall. “People who start medication early reduce their chance of serious complications,” says Liu’s colleague, cardiologist Prasant Pandey, M.D. Even at low dosages, these drugs can be lifesaving in the long term. Untreated, hypertension is known to cause kidney failure, stroke, blindness and congestive heart failure.
Some people start taking medication but quit because of side effects. With a wide array of blood pressure drugs to choose from, you and your doctor can find one that works for you. “Even pregnant women can find a medication they can safely take,” Pandey says. “And moderate-to-severe hypertension in the last trimester does require treatment.”
Blood pressure drugs come in a variety of types, including diuretics (which help your body remove fluid) and beta blockers, ACE inhibitors and calcium channel blockers (which act on blood vessel walls). Some tinkering may be necessary, “but once we’ve found the right drug or combination, most people don’t experience any significant side effects,” Liu says.
Your pharmacist can be a valuable ally as you zero in on the right medication, says registered pharmacist Janine Barnaby of Lehigh Valley Hospital and Health Network. She educates people taking hypertension drugs about potential interactions with other medications and foods, and about generics that may save them money.
Having a healthy lifestyle boosts the effectiveness of any blood pressure medication. For example, trimming your salt intake reduces the amount of fluid your body retains and losing weight eases your heart’s workload.
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What’s Considered High? |
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Diagnosis |
Systolic (upper number) |
Diastolic (lower number) |
| High blood pressure |
140 or above |
90 or above |
| Pre-hypertension |
120-139 |
80-89 |
| Normal adult |
120 or below |
80 or below |
Systolic—the pressure in the arteries when the heart is pumping blood |
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Diastolic—the pressure in the arteries between beats, when the heart is at rest and filling with blood |
This page last updated 3/30/08 03:13 PM
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