Blood Pressure Awareness Week - Know Your Numbers!
Around a third of people in the UK have high blood pressure (BP), but many don’t know it as there are often no symptoms. Risk factors for high blood pressure,...
Around a third of people in the UK have high blood pressure (BP), but many don’t know it as there are often no symptoms. Risk factors for high blood pressure,...
Know Your Numbers! This Week is the UK's biggest blood pressure testing and awareness event. It runs from the 4th-10th September. This year the focus is on home blood pressure monitoring to find those with undiagnosed high blood pressure (1).
Around a third of people in the UK have high blood pressure (BP), but many don’t know it as there are often no symptoms. Risk factors for high blood pressure, also known as hypertension, include age, race, family history, obesity, physical inactivity, tobacco use, unhealthy dietary habits and inadequate intake of minerals such as calcium, potassium, and magnesium. High blood pressure is a major cause of heart attacks and strokes.
A blood pressure (BP) reading consists of two numbers:
A healthy blood pressure reading for adults is usually below 120/80, which is reported as “120 over 80.” Children and teens may have slightly lower blood pressure. It may be normal for older adults to have slightly higher or lower blood pressure.
Both numbers give important information about your health. However, your healthcare provider might give more importance to high systolic pressure to determine your risk of heart disease.
Knowing your numbers means you can start making healthy lifestyle changes to bring your blood pressure down to a healthy level.
This year, the aim is for everyone to know their numbers. The campaign will:
Here we’ll look at some diet, lifestyle and supplement recommendations that could help to prevent high blood pressure and to normalise it if it is high.
Eating to Normalise Blood Pressure
Dietary modification is one of the cornerstones in the treatment of hypertension. For decades attention focused on reducing salt intake as the key lifestyle modification to lower blood pressure. However, salt reduction is only part of the picture. Current American and European guidelines recommend eating fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and pulses and to decrease the consumption of red meat, sugar, and trans fats. A review of the evidence on dietary patterns associated with lower blood pressure (BP) found that the following dietary patterns may all lower blood pressure (2).:
The effects of diet on blood pressure are mediated by weight loss, reduction of inflammation, increased insulin sensitivity, and antihypertensive properties of some individual nutrients.
Lifestyle to Lower Blood Pressure
Nutrients for Healthy Blood Pressure
Blood pressure may be lowered by certain nutraceuticals such as beetroot juice, catechin rich beverages, lycopene and soy isoflavones (2,5). Licorice increases blood pressure (3).
The following supplements from Tom Oliver Nutrition may be helpful:
Magnesium - low dietary magnesium intake is associated with an increased risk of developing hypertension. Magnesium supplementation has blood pressure-lowering effects (6).
Vitamin C - increased vitamin C intake, vitamin C supplementation, and higher blood concentrations of vitamin C are associated with lower blood pressure (7).
Zinc - essential for more than 300 enzymes and 2000 transcription factors in the body. Zinc has important roles in the cardiovascular system (8) and may reduce systolic blood pressure (9).
Omega 3 fats - a meta-analysis found that the optimal intake of omega-3 fatty acids (DHA and EPA) for lowering BP is between 2g and 3g a day. Doses above 3g a day may be associated with additional benefits in lowering BP among groups at high risk for cardiovascular diseases (10).
Whey Protein - a meta-analysis found that whey protein significantly reduced systolic blood pressure (11).
References
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