Find A Physician
Return to High Blood Pressure (Hypertension) Overview
More on High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
Hospital News
Return to High Blood Pressure (Hypertension) Overview
More on High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
- Why African Americans Are At Greater Risk of Hypertension and Kidney Disease
- Presence of Gum Disease May Help Dentists and Physicians Identify Those at Increased Risk for Cardiovascular Disease
- Message to the Elderly: It's Never Too Late to Prevent Illness!
- For High Blood Pressure Patients, Preventing or Reducing Enlarged Heart May Decrease Risk for Diabetes
- For High-Blood-Pressure Patients, Preventing or Reducing Enlarged Heart Decreases Risk of Heart Failure
- Hot Flashes in Women Linked to High Blood Pressure, According to New Weill Cornell Study
- Health Effects of Secondhand Smoke Studied in First-of-Its-Kind Series of Clinical Studies
- Electrocardiogram Helps Predict Risk for Congestive Heart Failure in Hypertensive Patients
- New Treatment for Enlarged Heart Effective, NewYork Weill Cornell Study Shows
- Reducing Enlarged Heart Muscle Cuts Patients' Cardiac Risk, Independent of Lowered Blood Pressure, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Researchers Report
- NewYork Weill Cornell Research Highlights Need To Focus on Frequently Neglected Neurogenic Hypertension
- Research Shows Cholesterol-Lowering Drug Lovastatin Reduces Risk of Heart Attack in Healthy Adults
- Job Strain Linked to High Blood Pressure, Heart Disease Risk
- Lovastatin Treatment Reduces Events in Patients at Varying Degrees of Coronary Risk and Reduces Need for Invasive Procedures
- The Mind/Body Link in Essential Hypertension: Time for a New Paradigm
- Weill Cornell Researchers Identify a Likely Genetic Cause of Atherosclerosis
- Weill Cornell Researcher Shows How Progesterone Is Not Just Sex Hormone but Blood Pressure Hormone
- Losartan Better Than Beta-Blocker at Shrinking Enlarged Hearts, NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Study Shows
- Low-Dose, Over-the-Counter Statins May Be Safe, Effective Aid in Preventing Heart Disease for Americans at Moderate Risk, Says Weill Cornell Dean
- Weill Cornell Physician-Scientists Win 2 Top Awards at American Heart Association Meeting
- Weill Cornell Receives $7.6 Million Federal Grant for Clinical Trials on New Ways To Change Behavior in Patients With Cardiopulmonary Disease
- Comprehensive Review Finds Job Stress Does Not Contribute to Chronic High Blood Pressure
- Americans Encouraged to Make Many Lifestyle Changes, Not Just One, to Reduce Cardiovascular Risk
- Researcher Predicts Paradigm Shift in Heart Disease Treatment
- NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Announces State-of-the-Art, Vivian and Seymour Milstein Family Heart Center in Washington Heights
Research and Clinical Trials
Return to High Blood Pressure (Hypertension) Overview
More on High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
Health Library
Return to High Blood Pressure (Hypertension) Overview
More on High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
Clinical Services
Return to High Blood Pressure (Hypertension) Overview
More on High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)
High Blood Pressure / Hypertension
What is blood pressure?
Blood pressure, measured with a blood pressure cuff and stethoscope by a nurse or other healthcare provider, is the force of the blood pushing against the artery walls. Each time the heart beats, it pumps blood into the arteries, resulting in the highest blood pressure as the heart contracts. One cannot take his or her own blood pressure unless an electronic blood pressure monitoring device is used. Electronic blood pressure monitors may also measure the heart rate, or pulse.
Two numbers are recorded when measuring blood pressure. The top number, or systolic pressure, refers to the pressure inside the artery when the heart contracts and pumps blood through the body. The bottom number, or diastolic pressure, refers to the pressure inside the artery when the heart is at rest and is filling with blood. Both the systolic and diastolic pressures are recorded as "mm Hg" (millimeters of mercury). This recording represents how high the mercury column is raised by the pressure of the blood.
High blood pressure, or hypertension, directly increases the risk of coronary heart disease (heart attack) and stroke (brain attack). With high blood pressure, the arteries may have an increased resistance against the flow of blood, causing the heart to pump harder to circulate the blood.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has determined two levels of high blood pressure for adults:
- Stage 1
- 140 mm Hg to 159 mm Hg systolic pressure-top number
and
- 90 mm Hg to 99 mm Hg diastolic pressure-bottom number
- 140 mm Hg to 159 mm Hg systolic pressure-top number
- Stage 2
- 160 mm Hg or higher systolic pressure
and
- 100 mm Hg or higher diastolic pressure
- 160 mm Hg or higher systolic pressure
The NHLBI defines prehypertension as:
- 120 mm Hg - 139 mm Hg systolic pressure
and
- 80 mm Hg - 89 mm Hg diastolic pressure
The NHLBI guidelines define normal blood pressure as follows:
- Less than 120 mm Hg systolic pressure
and
- Less than 80 mm Hg diastolic pressure
These numbers should be used as a guide only. A single elevated blood pressure measurement is not necessarily an indication of a problem. Your physician will want to see multiple blood pressure measurements over several days or weeks before making a diagnosis of hypertension (high blood pressure) and initiating treatment. A person who normally runs a lower-than-usual blood pressure may be considered hypertensive with lower blood pressure measurements than 140/90.
What is a risk factor?
A risk factor is anything that may increase a person's chance of developing a disease. It may be an activity such as smoking, diet, family history, or many other things. Different diseases, including cancers, have different risk factors.
Although these factors can increase a person's risk, they do not necessarily cause the disease. Some people with one or more risk factors never develop the disease, while others who do develop the disease may have no known risk factors.
But, knowing your risk factors to any disease can help to guide you into the appropriate actions, including changing behaviors and being clinically monitored for the disease.
What are the risk factors for high blood pressure?
Nearly one-third of all Americans have high blood pressure, but it is particularly prevalent in:
- persons with diabetes mellitus, gout, or kidney disease.
- African-Americans (particularly those who live in the southeastern United States).
- persons in their early to middle adult years; men in this age group have higher blood pressure more often than women in this age group.
- persons in their middle to later adult years; women in this age group have higher blood pressure more often than men in this age group (more women have high blood pressure after menopause than men of the same age).
- middle-aged and elderly people - more than half of all Americans age 60 and older have high blood pressure.
- persons whose parents or grandparents have/had high blood pressure.
- obese people.
- heavy drinkers of alcohol.
- women who are taking oral contraceptives.
How does blood pressure increase?
The following may contribute to an increase in blood pressure:
- being overweight
- excessive sodium intake
- a lack of exercise and physical activity
How is high blood pressure controlled?
Many people can control high blood pressure by:
- choosing foods that are low in sodium (salt).
- choosing foods low in calories and fat.
- choosing foods high in starch and fiber.
- maintaining a healthy weight, or losing weight if overweight.
- limiting serving sizes.
- increasing physical activity.
- reducing or omitting alcoholic beverages.
However, other people must take daily medication to control hypertension. People with hypertension should routinely have their blood pressure checked and be under the care of a physician.
Always consult your physician for more information.
Click here to view the
Online Resources of Men's Health
