NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have "prehypertension," blood
pressure levels just below the cut-off for a diagnosis of high blood
pressure, have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, according to
a report in The American Journal of Medicine.
Individuals with prehypertension, in the range of 120/80 to 139/89 mm Hg,
who are elderly, obese, diabetic or African American have an even higher
risk of cardiovascular disease, Dr. Abhijit V. Kshirsagar from the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told Reuters Health.
Kshirsagar and colleagues investigated the relationship between
prehypertension and the risk of new cardiovascular disease in nearly
9,000 men and women participating in the Atherosclerosis Risk in
Communities study.
At the beginning of the study, patients with high-normal blood pressure
also had a greater prevalence of traditional risk factors for
cardiovascular disease compared with the optimal blood pressure group,
the authors report.
The rate of cardiovascular disease over the 11.6 years of follow-up
increased significantly as blood pressure levels increased.
Compared with patients with optimal blood pressure, those with high-
normal blood pressure had a 2.5-fold risk of developing cardiovascular
disease, after consideration of other recognized cardiovascular risk
factors.
Compared with optimal blood pressure, normal and high-normal blood
pressure were associated with the development of cardiovascular disease
among all subgroups, the results indicate. Most of the cardiovascular
diseases that emerged were related to coronary heart disease rather than
stroke.
Cardiovascular disease risk was especially high among blacks, diabetics,
obese patients and those with LDL levels, the "bad" type of cholesterol,
between 100 mg/dL and129 mg/dL, the investigators observed.
Prehypertension is clearly associated with a significant increase in
cardiovascular disease," the researchers conclude.
"The prehypertensive population is large," Kshirsagar added. "Studies
targeted at this population have the potential to make a significant
impact."
SOURCE: The American Journal of Medicine, February 2006.
listener - 23 Feb 2006 02:56 GMT
> NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have "prehypertension," blood
> pressure levels just below the cut-off for a diagnosis of high blood
[quoted text clipped - 42 lines]
>
> SOURCE: The American Journal of Medicine, February 2006.
After reading this I took my BP. 114/64. So what is considered optimal?
L.
Tony Wesley - 23 Feb 2006 05:25 GMT
> After reading this I took my BP. 114/64. So what is considered optimal?
Going by memory of what my doctor told me, 115/75 is. That might be
for a man, I don't know.
Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD - 23 Feb 2006 05:33 GMT
> > After reading this I took my BP. 114/64. So what is considered optimal?
>
> Going by memory of what my doctor told me, 115/75 is. That might be
> for a man, I don't know.
115/75 or lower **without** symptoms.
Will be available to "glow" and chat about this and other things like
cardiology, diabetes, Bird Flu, cooking and nutrition that interest
those following this thread here during the next on-line chat
(02/23/06) from 6 to 7 pm EST:
http://tinyurl.com/8w7uq
For those who are put off by the signature, my advance apologies for
how the LORD has reshaped me:
http://tinyurl.com/7mcuo
Prayerfully in Christ's love,
Andrew
http://tinyurl.com/8juld