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Home /Healthcare/Hypertension


Who is at Risk? | Different Types

Treatment

What is Hypertension?

Blood travels through your body by flowing through arteries, carrying oxygen-rich blood from your heart to other tissues and organs. Once oxygen is delivered to your tissues and organs, oxygen-poor blood travels back to your heart through your veins. Your heart then pumps this blood into your lungs, where it is replenished with oxygen. After returning to your heart, the blood is pumped out into your arteries again. Blood pressure is the force exerted by blood against artery walls as it circulates through your body. This is what is measured at your doctor's office.

Your body monitors and adjusts blood pressure through a complex interaction between your heart, blood vessels (arteries and veins), nervous system, kidneys, and several hormones, in response to various stimuli.

Many things can cause blood pressure to rise. When you are asleep, your blood pressure is low because your body needs less oxygen-rich blood when it is at rest. On the other hand, when you are exercising, your body's demands are greater, and so your blood pressure increases.

It is perfectly normal for your blood pressure to rise and fall in response to your body's needs throughout the day. Remember, hypertension is when your blood pressure is sustained above your normal range.

There are several risk factors that may contribute to whether or not you develop hypertension. Some of these, such as weight, diet, and lifestyle, are examples of risk factors you can control. Consumption of alcoholic beverages and smoking, which cause blood pressure to rise, are examples of risk factors you have the power to eliminate. Other risk factors, such as age, heredity, race, and gender, cannot be changed.

Hypertension or high blood pressure, results from either an increase in the amount of blood that is pumped by the heart or an increased resistance to blood as it flows through the arteries. In other words, the flow of blood travels through narrowed arteries, requiring your heart to pump harder just to keep the blood flowing.

Remember, as blood pressure increases, the strain becomes greater on your arteries as well as on your heart. This increased strain means that your heart must work much harder all the time. The result - an enlarged heart that is increasingly less effective in pumping blood throughout your body.

It is possible to have hypertension and not know it. Many people with this condition do not have any obvious symptoms, meaning they are "asymptomatic". It is, therefore, very important to have regular check-ups with your doctor and follow his or her instructions; left untreated, hypertension can result in serious complications.

 

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