Definition of High Blood Pressure Drop
By Dennis Thompson
HealthDay Reporter
HealthDay Reporter
(HealthDay News) –
Nearly half of all adult
Americans will be considered to have high blood pressure under new guidelines
issued Monday by the nation's top heart health organizations.
The new guidelines lower the diagnostic threshold for stage 1 high blood pressure to 130/80, down from
the previous level of 140/90, according to a joint statement from the American
Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology.
Further,
the guidelines also call for more aggressive treatment of high blood pressure, asking doctors and
patients to set 130/80 as the new goal of therapy.
High blood pressure can lead to heart attacks, strokes and heart
failure.
But
the guidelines also press for more judicious treatment of high blood pressure
-- sometimes called hypertension -- and an emphasis on
lifestyle risk factors. Prescriptions for blood pressure drugs are not expected to leap under the
guidelines, experts said.
The
two heart organizations announced the new guidelines Monday at the American
Heart Association's annual meeting, in Anaheim, Calif. The guidelines were last
revised in 2003.
This
change means that 103 million Americans will be considered to have high blood
pressure, or about 46 percent of the adult population, said Dr. Paul Whelton.
He is chair of the 2017 Hypertension Practice Guidelines and a professor of
Global Public Health at Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical
Medicine in New Orleans.
That's
a 14 percent increase from the previous guidelines, under which 72.2 million
Americans (32 percent of adults) were considered to have high blood pressure.
The
latest medical evidence has proven that people with blood pressure in the
130-139 range carry a doubled risk of heart attack, stroke, heart failure and kidney
failure, compared to those with lower blood pressure, said Dr.
Joaquin Cigarroa, a member of the clinical guidelines task force.
Previously,
those people were considered to have prehypertension, but not actual high blood
pressure.
"By
incorporating the latest science, we recognize the risk is doubled," said
Cigarroa, chief of cardiology and clinical chief of the Knight Cardiovascular
Institute at Oregon Health & Science University, in Portland. "This
now allows 14 percent of our population to understand that's a call to action.
We have to empower them with the tools to make a difference."
The
impact of the new guidelines is expected to be greatest among younger people.
High blood pressure is expected to triple among men under age 45 and double
among women under 45, according to the guidelines report.
However,
only about 30 percent of people with stage 1 high blood pressure under the
guidelines will require drug therapy, Whelton said.
That's
because everyone with stage 1 high blood pressure will be evaluated for heart disease. Only those with heart disease or at high risk for
developing it during the next decade will be prescribed drugs, the guidelines
state.
"We're
more specific about who should get treatment," Whelton said. "It's a
nice combination of understanding accurately average blood pressure and also
understanding underlying risk. We didn't have that in previous
guidelines."
The
rest of those at risk under the new guidelines will be urged to reduce their
blood pressure through lifestyle changes -- losing weight, eating healthful
foods, cutting down on salt, increasing potassium-rich foods, exercising
regularly and moderating their drinking, said Dr. Bob Carey. He is vice chair
of the 2017 Hypertension Practice Guidelines and dean emeritus of the
University of Virginia School of Medicine.
The
experts estimate "a projected increase in patients with stage 1 hypertension
requiring drug therapy of 1.9 percent," Carey said. "This amounts to
4.2 million people, based on the U.S. population."
The
new guidelines also stress the importance of using proper technique to measure
blood pressure, with a person's level based on an average of two to three
readings on at least two different occasions.
Home
blood pressure monitoring also will be emphasized to avoid "white-coat
hypertension" -- the tendency for some people to have higher blood
pressure in a medical setting than they do in everyday life, the report said.
The
U.S. government in 2013 asked the AHA and ACC to draft new guidelines for blood
pressure management, said ACC President Dr. Mary Walsh. She is medical director
of Heart Failure and Cardiac Transplantation at St. Vincent Heart Center of
Indiana.
The
new guidelines are the product of a 21-member committee, following a three-year
review of medical evidence that included more than 900 studies, Whelton said.
The studies were reviewed by 52 experts who submitted close to 1,000 questions,
and approved by 11 partnering medical organizations.
The
new guidelines "take advantage of evidence almost up to the minute, so
they are very current," Whelton said.
Blood
pressure categories in the new guidelines are:
- Normal: Less than 120 systolic pressure (the top
number).
- Prehypertension: 120 to 129.
- Stage 1: Systolic between 130 and139.
- Stage 2: Systolic of 140 or higher.
Systolic
pressure is the amount of pressure in your arteries during contraction of the
heart muscle.
Copyright © 2017 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
SOURCES:
Paul Whelton, M.D., M.Sc., professor, Global Public Health, Tulane University
School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, New Orleans; Joaquin Cigarroa,
M.D., chief, cardiology, and clinical chief, Knight Cardiovascular Institute,
Oregon Health & Science University, Portland; Bob Carey, M.D., dean
emeritus, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville; Mary
Walsh, M.D., medical director, Heart Failure and Cardiac Transplantation, St.
Vincent Heart Center of Indiana, Indianapolis; Nov. 13, 2017, presentation,
American Heart Association annual meeting, Anaheim, Calif.
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