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Johns Hopkins Health Alert

Tweaking Your Diet to Lower Your Blood Pressure

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A study led by Johns Hopkins professor Dr. Lawrence Appel shows that making lifestyle adjustments can lower blood pressure and improve the effectiveness of blood pressure-lowering medication.

Hypertension is more treatable than ever before, thanks to a wide variety of lifestyle measures and blood pressure medications. When effective, these treatments can not only lower blood pressure, but also reduce the risk of complications from hypertension -- specifically, stroke, heart attack, heart failure, and kidney disease.

Research shows that the effects of lifestyle changes are additive. Thus, the more you adopt, the greater the benefits. In a study led by Dr. Lawrence Appel (coauthor of the Johns Hopkins Hypertension and Stroke White Paper), people with prehypertension or mild hypertension who lost weight, followed the DASH diet, reduced salt and alcohol intake, and exercised regularly lowered their systolic blood pressure by an extra 4 mm Hg over a six-month period, compared with people who only received advice on these lifestyle changes. By making lifestyle adjustments, you’ll also improve the effectiveness of your blood pressure-lowering medication and lower your risk of hypertension complications such as heart attack and stroke.

Many people can keep up the diet and other lifestyle changes that help control hypertension and ward off disease, according to a study in the Annals of Internal Medicine (Volume 144, page 485 ). In a study of 810 adults with prehypertension or mild hypertension, researchers found that those who underwent a lifestyle overhaul were generally able to maintain the changes during the 18-month study. But it did take some work.

Participants had regular counseling sessions on how to incorporate lifestyle changes into their daily routines -- which included eating more fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy products and cutting down on saturated fat and sodium; getting at least three hours of exercise a week; and, if overweight, trying to shed 15 lbs. Some participants received only advice on making these lifestyle changes, and they served as the control group. Compared with the advice-only group, those in the counseling group were about one fifth less likely to have hypertension at the study’s end. These findings show that with some help you can shake up your lifestyle and stick with it.

Interested in learning more about the DASH diet? See these articles:

Posted in Hypertension and Stroke on June 30, 2009


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