41 Natural ways to lower blood pressure

Natural ways to lower blood pressure

It’s an emerging epidemic in North America: One out of every three people has pre-hypertension, a condition thal leads to high blood pressure. And most of them don’t know it.

Don’t assume that your blood pressure is normal lust because it used to be. Get it checked often. Once high blood pressure develops, it usually lasts a lifetime. Sure, you can lower it with treatment. But stop treating it, and it goes up again. It’s easier and wiser to prevent high blood pressure in the first place.

So fight this key risk for heart attacks, strokes and kidney disease now. Read on to learn about assessing your risk–and about 68 natural options for preventing high blood pressure. And be assured that even the 50 million Americans currently afflicted with high blood pressure can lower their readings by following our prevention plan.

 

1. Watch Your Weight: In over weight people, a 10 percent reduction in total body weight will sometimes normalize blood pressure.

2. Get Physical: Go for a brisk 30-minute walk 6 days a week.

3. Meditate: A new study shows it works for teens too.

4. Try Yoga: It reduces stress and strengthens the mind and body.

5. Butt Out: All forms of tobacco dramatically raise blood pressure.

6. Shake Off Salt: And sodium-rich foods such as soy sauce and canned soups.

7. Leave the Bar: 1-2 drinks a day is OK–even stress-relieving–but more can cause health problems.

8. Check Your Blood: Have cholesterol and triglycerides checked regularly.

9. Reject Refined Foods: Shun the sally, sugary, pre-made, preserved, fried and fatty.

10. Swear Off Sodas: Soft drinks can deplete potassium (see No. 20).

11. Find Fiber: Think veggies and whole grains.

12. Forgo Fat: Choose white fish and skinless chicken and turkey. Skip cheese, bacon, red meat, gravy and desserts.

13. Toss the Trans Fats: These are a greater risk than even saturated fats.

14. Howl for Whole Oats: Eaten daily, oats lower hypertension.

15. Try L-Carnitine: Another amino acid, also found in protein.

16. DASH Your Diet: DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) is high in fruits, vegetables and low-fat dairy, and it’s low in fat.

17. Defeat Diabetes: Diabetics who control their condition reduce hypertension risk.

18. Compute Your Body Mass Index: Multiply your weight in pounds by 703; then divide by your height in inches; then again divide by your height in inches. Try to stay between 18.5 and 24.9.

19. Mull Over a Multi: A daily multivitamin ensures that you’re getting the basics.

20. Prefer Potassium: This crucial mineral is found in many fruits, vegetables, dairy foods, fish and supplements.

21. Make It Magnesium: It’s in leafy greens, legumes, whole grains and supplements.

22. Value Vitamin C: The less vitamin C in the blood, the higher the blood pressure in hypertensive patients.

23. Boost Bioflavonoids: Available in fruits, vegetables and supplements, bioflavonoids enhance vitamin C’s effect.

24. Embrace Vitamin E: Evidence suggests that vitamin E also magnifies vitamin C’s blood pressure-lowering effect.

25. Get Milk: Hypertensive patients seldom drink enough milk–and they are usually low on calcium. Broccoli, spinach, tofu, goat milk and calcium supplements are alternatives.

26. Pick Pycnogenol: French maritime pine bark extract lowered blood pressure in a Chinese study, which was reported in the January 2, 2004 issue of Life Sciences.

27. Fish for Omega-3s: Stress essential fatty acid-containing foods or supplements of fish oil, flaxseed oil and primrose oil.

28. Queue Up for Coenzyme Q10: Hypertensive patients are often deficient in ubiquinone. Aside from supplements, organ meats are the richest sources.

29. Seize the Soy: Studies suggest that the isoflavones in soy, tofu, tempeh and miso make arterial walls more elastic.

30. Think Zinc: Zinc may reverse hypertension that has been caused by too much cadmium.

31. Have Some Hawthorn: An enzyme that can cause arteries to constrict is blocked by this berry.

32. Look for Linden: This blossom is often combined with hawthorn for blood pressure.

33. Target Taurine: This amino acid–available in protein and as a supplement–balances sodium and potassium in the blood, lowering blood pressure.

34. Crave Carrot Juice: Studies show it cleans arteries.

35. Cook with Cayenne: The capsicum in cayenne slows arteriosclerosis, which can cause hypertension.

36. Don’t Pass on Parsley: It’s a natural diuretic, which cuts blood pressure.

37. Go for Ginger: Ginger offers hypertensive benefits to some.

38. Seal the Deal: Goldenseal root may reduce blood pressure, especially when taken in conjunction with ginger.

39. Defy Dracula: Evidence shows that garlic lowers hypertension 2-7 percent. Onions help too.

40. Single Out Psyllium: Take this soluble fiber with plenty of water. Other sources of fiber include peas, beans, apples, pears and citrus fruit.

41. Consider Black Cohosh: Commonly used to alleviate the symptoms of menopause, this herb may also help with hypertension.

By: admin  :  Filed Under Treat Low Blood Pressure

High Blood Pressure, an Introduction to Treatment Options

At one point, Doctors hesitated to prescribe medication for patients with a blood pressure reading of less than 159/99 Hg. This was described as “mild hypertension” and as such not deemed at the time to be dangerous.

The rationale behind this that Doctors felt that the adverse side effects of the medication used at the time would possibly be of more danger to the patient than the high blood pressure readings.

Times have changed however and this line of thinking is no longer in use. Both of the above perceptions relating to the danger of the side effects and the mild nature of the blood pressure readings have lead to the discontinuance of this practice.

Recent research has firmly established the value of treating “stage 1 Hypertension” (a reading of between 140/90 – 159/99 Hg) with medication if necessary. It is now also considered prudent to treat patients who also suffer from Diabetes and High Blood Pressure if their readings are as low as 130/80 Hg. The sensitivity of medication nowadays is such that blood pressure levels can be controlled with much lower dosages meaning that the danger of side effects can also be reduced.

There has never been a greater variety of medication for High Blood Pressure available to Doctors from which to choose. These “antihypertensive drugs” also include many types of medication where there is a combination of several different types of drug. The newer types of medication quite often have a different chemical makeup and structure compared to the older ones but quite often produce nearly identical effects on the human body.

The range and sophistication of medication is such now that Doctors can produce care plans and treatment programmes tailored to the individual patient and in most cases prescribe medication that have little or minimal side effect to the patient and protect against possible further complications down the line.

On of the most important aspects of where treatment differs nowadays is that Doctors can quite possibly provide one single course of medication that can treat conditions like Hypertension and accompanying medical problems like congestive Heart Failure.

The generally accepted initial approach to Hypertension Treatment nowadays is to start slow & low and then build gradually where possible gradually increasing the dosage of the medicine prescribed until the blood pressure level sinks to a normal level. If this is not shown to work or causes troublesome side effects then a wide number of replacement medications are available for use.

The presently accepted course of treatment for Stage 1 Hypertension is to start with one drug and add a second if the blood pressure reading does not respond or decrease to normal levels. The target levels here are 140/90 Hg. For those with diabetes or chronic kidney disease then the ideal targets are reduced to 130/80 Hg. For “Stage 2 Hypertension” (the old levels of conventional High Blood Pressure) then the accepted treatment programme is to start with at least 2 drugs. Again if the response to this is not within an acceptable timeframe then the introduction of a third drug may occur.

Just when you think that Hypertension can be controlled with purely medication. There is a marked improvement to all of these programmes when the medication is accompanied by the introduction and implementation of lifestyle changes such as a well balanced diet, reduction in the consumption of alcohol, increased exercise and a complete cessation of smoking.

‘Nuff said really.

Stephen Morgan writes for High

Blood Pressure
and further details about this subject and other associate

matters can be found at


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