Blood pressure: What is normal? - NIIMS HEALTH CARE AND RESEARCH

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Wednesday, January 25, 2017

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Blood pressure: What is normal?


blood-pressure

Dr. Parvathy Aravind
Head of the Dept. Cardiac Surgery
NIIMS Health Care & Research


Normal blood pressure is vital to life: Without the pressure that forces our blood to flow around the circulatory system, no oxygen or nutrients would be delivered through our arteries to the tissues and organs.
But blood pressure can be unhealthily high, and it can also be too low.
In this article, we will discuss what blood pressure is, how it is measured, and what the measurements mean for our health.

What is blood pressure?

270644-hose
Without a pump or water tank, no water will flow.
Hose pipe properties also affect water pressure.
Similar principles apply for blood flow.


The direct answer to the question, "what is blood pressure?" is a short one: Blood pressure is the force that moves blood through our circulatory system.
It is a life force because, without blood pressure, the following two basic provisions would not be pushed around our circulatory system to feed tissues and organs:
  • oxygen
  • nutrients
Blood pressure is also vital because it delivers white blood cells and antibodies for immunity, and hormones such as insulin.
Just as important as providing oxygen and nutrients, the fresh blood that gets delivered is able to pick up the toxic waste products of metabolism, including the carbon dioxide we exhale with every breath, and the toxins we clear through our liver and kidneys.
Blood itself carries a number of other properties, including its temperature. It also carries one of our defenses against tissue damage, the clotting platelets that prevent blood loss following injury.
But what exactly is it that causes blood to exert a pressure in our arteries? Part of the answer is simple - the heart creates blood pressure by forcing out blood when it contracts with every heartbeat. Blood pressure, however, cannot be created solely by the pumping heart.

Biology and physics

Our circulation is a highly sophisticated form of plumbing - blood has 'flow' and arteries are 'pipes.' A basic law of physics gives rise to our blood flow, and this law also applies in a garden hose pipe.
Blood flows through our body because of a difference in pressure.
Our blood pressure is highest at the start of its journey from our heart - when it enters the aorta - and it is lowest at the end of its journey along progressively smaller branches of arteries. That pressure difference is what causes blood to flow around our bodies.
Just as the physical properties of a garden hose pipe affect the water pressure - constrict the pipe and the pressure is increased at that point - so too do arteries affect blood pressure.
Without the elastic nature of the artery walls, for example, the pressure of the blood would fall away more quickly as it is pumped from the heart.
So while the heart creates the maximum pressure, the properties of the arteries are just as important to maintaining it and allowing blood to flow throughout the body.
The condition of the arteries has an effect on blood pressure and flow, and narrowing of the arteries can eventually block the supply altogether (a heart attack is the heart itself being cut off; a stroke is caused when arteries to the brain are blocked or bleed).

Measuring blood pressure

270862-pressure
When the pressure from the arm cuff stops the pulse briefly,
it gives the top figure of arterial blood pressure that
 we are familiar with from medical
 dramas - for example, "140 over 90"


The device used to measure blood pressure is a sphygmomanometer, it consists of a rubber armband - the cuff that is inflated by hand or machine pump.
Once the cuff is inflated enough to stop the pulsea reading is taken, either electronically or on an analogue dial.
The reading is expressed in terms of the pressure it takes to move mercury round a tube against gravity - hence the unit, millimeters of mercury, abbreviated to mmHg.

Systolic and diastolic readings

A stethoscope identifies the precise point when the pulse sound returns as the pressure of the cuff is slowly released. Using the stethoscope enables the person measuring the blood pressure to listen out for two specific points.
Blood pressure readings consist of two figures - the systolic pressure first and the diastolic pressure second. The reading is given as, for example 140 over 90.
The systolic pressure is the higher figure caused by the heart's contraction, while the diastolic number is the lower pressure in the arteries, during the brief 'resting' period between heartbeats.

What is normal blood pressure?

blood-pressure-what-is-normal-chart
Chart explaining what constitutes high and low blood pressure.
Adapted from source
This is another question that doctors try to give a simple answer to, although blood pressure normality is complex.
Cardiologists do not really talk about a normal range - instead they work on the basis of when blood pressures should be considered too high, figures that continue to be refined by the medical research. The National Institutes of Health cites normal blood pressure to be below a certain level:
  • No greater than 120 mmHg systolic and 80 mmHg diastolic
But blood pressure changes naturally, a fact that is best described in a quote from cardiologists writing about blood-pressure variability in a paper published by Nature in March 2013:
"Blood pressure is characterized by marked short-term fluctuations occurring within a 24-hour period (beat-to-beat, minute-to-minute, hour-to-hour, and day-to-night changes) and also by long-term fluctuations occurring over more prolonged periods of time (days, weeks, months, seasons, and even years)."
The guidelines state that for blood pressures above a figure of 115/75 mmHg, every rise of 20/10 mmHg doubles the risk of cardiovascular disease.
The overall hypertension (high blood pressure) guidelines received an update in December 2013, drawing from the evidence to recommend that anyone aged 60 years or more with hypertensionshould aim for a blood pressure level of less than 150/90 mmHg.

How to maintain a healthy blood pressure level

The guidelines for doctors list the following measures patients can take to help keep a healthy blood pressure:

  • Keep a healthy body weight.
  • Eat a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and low-fat dairy products.
  • Cut down on sodium intake (salt in the diet).
  • Take regular aerobic exercise (e.g., brisk walking) at least 30 minutes a day, most days of the week.
  • Moderate your alcohol drinking - keep under a maximum of 2 drinks a day for men and 1 drink a day for women/men of lighter weight (one drink having a half ounce of alcohol).

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