High Blood Pressure May Vary By Season
Study Shows Higher Doses Of Medication May Be Needed In Winter
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(AP)
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The findings suggest that people with high blood pressure may need higher doses of medication or even different drugs in the winter months, says researcher Ross D. Fletcher, MD, chief of staff at the VA Medical Center in Washington, D.C.
The researchers analyzed the electronic health records of 443,632 veterans with high blood pressure treated at 15 VA hospitals throughout the U.S. over a five-year period.
Blood pressure was nearly 8 percent less likely to return to normal in the winter than in the summer, the study showed.
"In all cities, there was a seasonal variation that didn't seem to be related to outside temperature," Fletcher says.
Whether you're in San Juan, Puerto Rico, or Anchorage, Alaska, "every summer it gets better and every winter it gets worse," he tells WebMD.
One hopeful trend: In each of the 15 cities studied, the number of people with hypertension whose levels returned to normal rose an average of 4 percent per year, Fletcher says.
The findings were reported at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2007.
Understanding Your Blood Pressure Reading
"Normal" blood pressure is a measurement of less than 120/80; pre-hypertension is a blood pressure reading in which the top number is in the range of 120-139 and the bottom number is in the range of 80-89.
In the study, people with readings of more than 140 over 90 on three separate days were considered to have high blood pressure.
Explaining the Seasonal Gap
Fletcher says that weight and exercise may play a role in the seasonal variations. "People gain weight in the winter and lose weight in the summer. People tend to exercise more in the summer and less in the winter," he says.
Our goal is to get as many people to below 140 over 90 as possible.
Jonathan Halperin, MD, Mount Sinai Medical CenterHalperin notes that other studies have shown that blood pressure and heart disease rates can vary over the course of a day.
Heart attacks, for example occur more commonly in the morning, he says, while blood pressure tends to drop at night. "But to my knowledge, this study is the first to show seasonal variations," Halperin tells WebMD.
Blood Pressure in Summer and Winter
Halperin advises doctors and patients to be more attentive to blood pressure in winter months.
"If a person has borderline readings in the summer, he should think about being screened again in six months to make sure blood pressure hasn't dropped further," he says.
If blood pressure does dip in the winter, a more potent treatment regimen should be considered, Fletcher says.
"Our goal is to get as many people to below 140 over 90 as possible," he says.
The other 13 VA hospitals studied were in Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Fargo, N.D., Honolulu, Houston, west Los Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York, Philadelphia, Portland, Ore., and Washington, D.C.
By Charlene Laino
Reviewed by Louise Chang
©2007 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved.
- Great. More good news from our reliable, sincere, empathetic medical community.
Patients are now required to come in for BP checks on a quarterly basis, consistant with seasonal changes. This cannot be combined with the required annual physical, nor the required 90 check-up to measure blood levels related to the mandatory statin treatments.
It will be illegal to ask any questions unrelated to the scheduled appointment. A separate appointment needs to be made with advance commitment to topics for discussion with the physician.
A maximum of 4 minutes per appointment, earning an additional minute for each prescription, 5 minutes to discuus and make appointments for preventive testing. Patients enrolling in CT scans, PET scans or ultrsound, will get a free dinner-for-two at the deli of their choice.
Any patient who doesn''t generate at least $30k in annual revenues, will be terminated. - Reply to this comment
- What else can an industry ask for? Extra visits and changing side effect lace medication; now that does a body no good.
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