High Blood Pressure: Natural Self-help for Hypertension, including 60 recipes
if phaeochromocytoma (tumour of the adrenal gland) is suspected.
EYE EXAMINATIONS
High blood pressure damages small arteries throughout your body. Those in the back of the eye have the advantage of being visible using an ophthalmoscope and they show the state of arterioles throughout your system, including your brain. Early changes due to hypertension include thickening of retinal blood vessel walls. If hypertension becomes long-standing or severe, the blood vessels leak and little haemorrhages form. Other changes are probably due to obstruction of vessels and reduced blood circulation.
Your doctor will regularly check the back of your eyes for signs of damage if your blood pressure has been high. This is performed in a darkened room using an ophthalmoscope, which contains a number of lenses and a light source. Sometimes you may have one eye dilated first with drops to make the task easier. The doctor is looking for various abnormalities known as Keith-Wagener retinal changes. These are divided into four stages of severity:
If haemorrhages, exudates or papilloedema are visible in the back of the eye, it shows that malignant hypertension (see page 5) has developed. These are the same sort of processes that are occurring in the brain and which are thought to lead to a stroke. It is very important that your hypertension is brought under control quickly and safely. You may be admitted to hospital for complete bed rest while your drug treatment is adjusted.
Peripheral Vascular Disease
Hardening and furring up of the arteries throughout the body can lead to peripheral vascular disease in which blood supply to your legs is severely limited. Even a mild increase in exercise means that your muscles need extra blood and oxygen – if these cannot be supplied, your leg muscles will start to cramp. This causes a severe pain in the calf muscles which comes on during exercise and stops when you rest – a condition called intermittent claudication. If your blood supply is severely affected, even walking 100 metres or less on the flat can bring symptoms on. If blood supply is very poor, ischaemic pain may occur at rest, tissues may break down to form a leg ulcer and eventually gangrene may set in. Severe peripheral vascular disease is most likely in someone with hypertension who also smokes, or who also suffers from diabetes.
Aspirin will help to thin the blood and improve blood supply. Some tablets also work by increasing the flexibility of red blood cells so they can squeeze through small blood vessels more easily. Interestingly, research shows that taking garlic powder tablets, ginkgo biloba or a mix of Tibetan herbs known as Padma 28 can improve peripheral circulation enough to increase the distance you can walk before calf pain starts by up to 30 per cent in three months (see Chapter 19).
A severely narrowed artery in the leg can be overcome with a bypass graft to open up an alternative circulatory route. If there are only one or two main sites of blockage, these can sometimes be overcome by passing a balloon catheter into the artery and expanding it at the site of blockage to locally dilate the vessel in that area.
Treatment of High Blood Pressure
Early diagnosis and treatment can control your blood pressure before it harms your health. You will have your blood pressure measured several times before your doctor will decide to prescribe any anti-hypertensive drugs. This is to make sure your blood pressure remains consistently high and is not just going up as a result of visiting the surgery. The aim of blood-pressure treatment is to reduce diastolic BP to below 85 mmHg and/or systolic BP to below 140 mmHg (thresholds may be different in some groups of people such as the very elderly). Sometimes two or even three different types of drug are needed to achieve this goal.
The aim of treatment is to lower your blood pressure gradually. Your doctor will start you off on a low dose of tablets to see how your blood pressure responds. If this is not enough, your dose may be increased, other drugs may be added in, or your medication may be completely changed. In some cases, more than one drug may be needed to achieve an acceptable BP. It may seem annoying to have to take one, two or even three different kinds of drugs when you feel perfectly well. But by prescribing treatment to keep your blood pressure within normal limits, your doctor is helping you to avoid the complications of uncontrolled hypertension – heart attack, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, kidney failure and even blindness.
It is important to take your blood pressure tablets regularly as prescribed. Some tablets only need only to be taken once a day, but others may need to be taken two or more times daily. This depends on how long each dose of medicine works in your body, and on how bad your blood pressure is.
When most forms of anti-hypertensive treatment are stopped, blood pressure only climbs up only slowly over several days or even weeks. With some forms of treatment, however, a rebound effect can occur so your blood pressure shoots back up.
Don’t stop taking your blood pressure treatment without first consulting your doctor. If you notice something that may be a side-effect, such as a rash, dizziness or sexual problems, always tell your doctor immediately so your dose can be altered or your treatment changed to one that suits you better.
Research shows that controlling hypertension can:
GUIDELINES FOR DOCTORS
Doctors have been given guidelines to help them decide which patients with high blood pressure need treatment and which don’t. Basically, if your BP is consistently found to be above a certain level, it is important to bring it down to normal to reduce your risk of future complications such as coronary heart disease, kidney failure, eye problems (hypertensive retinopathy) or stroke. If complications (target organ damage) are already in evidence, the management of your condition will be stepped up.
These guidelines are based on extensive studies and trials that confirm the health benefits of treatment. In some cases, where blood pressure is borderline, and research does not show clear benefits of treatment, your doctor will monitor you regularly to make sure your BP does not go up. In these cases, diet and lifestyle changes are often enough to control your BP so you don’t need to take drug treatment at all.
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