[quote]teratos wrote:
Professor X wrote:
teratos wrote:
Your blood pressure is still too high. Current recommendations are BELOW 120/80. The lower the better. If you have a strong family history of heart disease, it is particularly important for you to keep it down. Fish oil can drop BP a bit, and will also improve your lipid profile. Flame Out is a good choice.
If you don’t do much cardio, consider adding it to your regimen. 30-45 minutes 4-5X a week. I know it can impact muscle growth, but that can be countered by consuming a protein drink immediately after aerobic exercise.
BTW, I am a hypertensive who takes creatine. I monitor my blood pressure closely, and saw no rise at all when adding creatine.
I am not sure where you got your standards from, but 120/80 is not “borderline high blood pressure”. That number is still closer to 145/95. They just INCREASED the line at which we can call patients as being hypertensive over a year ago.
Unless the military is operating under completely different standards, you are a little off. I don’t know anyone who would start worrying about someone’s blood pressure if they were highly active and simply read at 125/83.
The line was actually recently DECREASED. The JNC VII (Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure) is considered the “Ultimate Authority” on hypertension. Above 120 is now considered “pre-hypertensive”.
It is likely that they will decrease that again when the JNC VIII comes out.
Here is a link to an article about it on the American Heart Association page
I think, since I am hypertensive myself, and have a special interest in the pathophysiology and treatment of the disease, that I tend to be a bit more aggressive. I keep mine below 110/70. There is a direct relationship between the decrease in blood pressure and the decrease in heart attack/stroke. There is no point below which there is no further reduction in risk.
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Agressive or not, I think it is a little off to think of things that strictly without the understanding of what the actual line for being hypertensive is. Body mass is also a factor. We don’t treat patients for “pre-hypertensiveness” and many people operate in a range above 120/80 without further problems.
Also, to be even more clear, the TOTAL patient is what one should look at, not just a flat guideline at which point you start sounding alarms. An athlete who walks in at 10% body fat and who does regaular cardio weighing over 230lbs with a blood pressure of 130/80 is NOT the same as a patient who is inactive and overweight at 230lbs with 30% body fat at the age of 45 with a blood pressure of 130/80.