It is standard practice in my hospital to take your weight, temperature and blood pressure before you see the doctor. It is standard practice all over the world. Medical associations tell GP’s they should take a patient’s blood pressure every time the patient visits the doctor, no matter what the complaint. So is your blood pressure (written as BP) that important?
The answer is yes and no! And I am not backing all the horses in the race.
The big problem is that BP is not a static measurement which goes up and down all the time. Here is an example from my own readings. I was due for my medical, but was rather rushed, however the nurse ignored my pleas that I was too rushed. She took the pressure and it was something like 160/75. “Too high” she said, waiting for me to explode I think!
I left and after settling down, I popped into one of the Out Patients Clinics and got the nurse to take my BP. It was 118/70. Much better. So was the first machine wrong? No, this is normal fluctuations.
This is why, if your doctor tells you that you have “hypertension” (high BP) on just one reading – don’t believe him (or her).
So how do you find out if your BP is too high? Quite simply by repeated measurements. Just as one swallow doesn’t make a summer, one elevated reading does not necessarily mean hypertension.
You should get your BP done at least twice a year. Rising or elevated readings do mean you should get medical advice.
So why is BP important? Because if you don’t you don’t have BP you are definitely dead! However, if your BP is too high, it can mean you could be claiming early on your life insurance.
High BP is otherwise known as the “silent killer” as there are very few symptoms of the increase in blood pressure, until a vessel bursts somewhere, generally catastrophically! The good thing is you are dead within minutes, so you won’t linger.
Blood is needed to keep all the organs of the body supplied with oxygen. This is done by the red blood cells which carry the oxygen, with the pump to drive the system being the heart. The tubes from the heart heading outbound are the arteries, and those returning the blood to the heart are the veins.
This heart-arteries-veins-heart system is a “closed” circuit. In other words, no leaks, otherwise you would be continually losing the life-preserving blood, but to make it go around, there has to be a pumping pressure.
The heart squeezes the blood inside itself and pumps it out into the arteries. This squeezing pressure is called the Systolic, and is the upper number quoted when we measure your blood pressure.
After the squeeze, the heart relaxes to allow the blood to fill the chamber, ready for the next squeeze. The pressure does not return to zero, because there has to be some pressure to refill the chamber. This resting or ambient pressure is the lower number quoted and is called the Diastolic. BP is then typically quoted as 120/70, being 120 (systolic) / 70 (diastolic). The actual pressure number is measured in a millimeters of mercury scale.
So what is the “correct” BP? The following table shows the categories of BP measurements.
Optimal: less than 120/80
Normal: less than 130/80
High-normal: 130–139/85–89
Repeated high blood pressure (hypertension):
Stage 1: 140–159/90–99
Stage 2: 160–179/100–109
Stage 3: 180 or higher/110 or higher
The problem with running at high pressure is that the heart is having to work harder, and therefore may be subject to heart failure. The arteries are also subjected to higher pressures than they were designed to cope with and can burst, making the risk of stroke so much higher. Other organs don’t like working at the high pressures either, and kidneys, in particular, can go into failure mode.
No, if you really have hypertension, get it treated – but remember to have repeated measurements done, and don’t let the doctor classify you as being “hypertensive” until repeated measurements confirm that your BP is too high.