Could Low Blood Pressure Trigger Heart
Attacks?
Sept. 1, 2016 -- Doctors are being
urged to be cautious about loweringblood pressure too much in people with coronary artery disease, because it may
increase the risk of heart attacks, according to a study.
An international team of scientists,
including researchers from Imperial College London, found that while high blood pressure is responsible forheart attacks, blood pressure that is too
low could also trigger them.
Blood pressure readings are measured in
millimeters of mercury (mmHg) and are written as systolic pressure -- the force
of the bloodagainst the artery walls as your heart beats
-- over diastolic pressure -- the blood pressure between heartbeats. People
with ideal blood pressure will have readings below 120 over 80, expressed as
120/80. About 1 in 3 U.S. adults have high blood pressure, the American Heart
Association says.
Having high blood pressure, also known as hypertension, can lead to health problems
including heart disease, heart attack, stroke,
andkidney disease.
The study followed 22,672 people from
45 countries who had heart disease and who were also on medication for
high blood pressure. The scientists found that a blood pressure reading higher than
140/80 was linked to an increased risk of heart attack and stroke.
However, they also discovered that a
systolic blood pressure reading higher than 120 mmHg, as well as a diastolic
blood pressure below 70 mmHg, were associated with a higher chance of death,
having a heart attack, and hospitalization for heart failure.
The analysis “confirms the importance
of treating high blood pressure,” Professor
Kim Fox, co-author of the study and head of the National Heart and Lung
Institute at Imperial College London, says in a statement. "However it
also cautions against over-enthusiastic blood pressure control. Blood pressures
generally considered normal, and below 120/70, may be too low in patients with
coronary disease and treated hypertension." But the study found that to
reduce the risk of stroke, the lower the blood pressure, the
better.
The researchers say more studies are
needed to establish the ideal blood pressure levels below which harm outweighs
benefit. In the meantime, they suggest caution when treating people with heart disease with blood
pressure-lowering medication.
The study appears in the online edition
of The Lancet.
Source: www.webmed.com
02.09.2016
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