Friday, October 31, 2014

How can you lower your blood pressure


Blood pressure

Blood Pressure testHigh blood pressure is just one of the risk factors for developing heart and circulatory disease, along with high cholesterol, diabetes and other lifestyle factors. As many as 5 million people in the UK are walking around, undiagnosed, with high blood pressure.
The only way to know whether you have high blood pressure is to have it measured.
Everyone should know their blood pressure. We recommend that everyone over 40 gets their blood pressure taken by a nurse or doctor as part of a health check to assess their risk for getting heart and circulatory disease.
How Ann manages her high blood pressure

Ann has lost weight and gained confidence in her fight against high blood pressure, and so can you.

What is blood pressure?

Put simply, blood pressure is the pressure of blood in your arteries  - the tubes that carry your blood from your heart to your brain and the rest of your body. You need a certain amount of pressure to get the blood round your body.
The pressure of the blood flowing through your arteries changes at different times in the heartbeat cycle, as the heart. The pressure in your arteries will be at its highest when your heart is contracting and lowest as it relaxes before it pumps again.

What do the numbers mean?

Every blood pressure reading consists of two numbers or levels. They are shown as one number on top of the other and measured in mmHg, which means millimetres of mercury.  If your reading is 120/80mmHg, you might hear your doctor or nurse saying your blood pressure is "120 over 80".
  • The first (or top) number represents the highest level your blood pressure reaches when your heart contracts and pumps blood through your arteries - your systolic blood pressure. An example might be 130mmHg.
  • The second (or bottom) number represents the lowest level your blood pressure reaches as your heart relaxes between beats - your diastolic blood pressure. An example might be 75mmHg.
You should have your blood pressure measured so that you know what your target is. Unless your doctor tells you otherwise, your blood pressure should be below 140/90mmHg.
If you have heart or circulatory disease, including being told you have coronary heart disease,anginaheart attack or stroke, have diabetes or kidney disease, then it is usually recommended that your blood pressure should be below 130/80mmHg.

What is high blood pressure?

High blood pressure – or hypertension – means that your blood pressure is constantly higher than the recommended level. High blood pressure is not usually something that you can feel or notice, but over time if it is not treated, your heart may become enlarged making your heart pump less effectively, which could lead to heart failure.
Having high blood pressure increases your chance of having a heart attack or stroke.
There isn’t always an explanation for the cause of high blood pressure, but these can play a part:
  • not doing enough physical activity
  • being overweight or obese
  • having too much salt in your diet
  • regularly drinking too much alcohol or
  • having a family history of high blood pressure.
Even if you don't have high blood pressure, making simple lifestyle changes may help prevent you having it in the future.


What can I do to reduce my blood pressure?

If your doctor or nurse says you have high blood pressure, he/she is likely to encourage you to make some lifestyle changes to help reduce it. This may include increasing your physical activity, losing weight, reducing the salt in your diet, cutting down on alcohol and eating a balanced, healthy diet.
If your blood pressure is very high or these lifestyle changes do not reduce it enough, your doctor is likely to prescribe you medication to control it and to reduce your risk of having a heart attack or stroke.

Lucintel Estimates Global Home Healthcare Device Industry Reach US $29 Billion in 2017



Lucintel Estimates Global Home Healthcare Device Industry Reach US $29 Billion in 2017

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Irving, TX (PRWEB) July 22, 2012
The demographics of an aging population and a growing demand for convenient, cost-effective products are expected to drive growth in the Home Healthcare Device industry. Theglobal market is forecast to reach an estimated US $29 billion in 2017 with a CAGR of 3.4% over the next five years.
Lucintel, a leading global management consulting andmarket research firm, has analyzed the Global Home Healthcare Device industry and presents its findings in“Global Home Healthcare Device Industry2012-2017:Trend, Profit, and Forecast Analysis.”
The Home Healthcare Device industry consists of home-based treatment such as glucose monitors, blood pressure monitors, diabetes control devices, wheelchairs, walking aids, home dialysis equipment, test strips, heart rate meters, sleep monitoring devices, and such other home healthcare devices.Factors such as technology innovations, growth numbers of elderly people,an increasing patient pool, and changing lifestyles impact the market dynamics significantly.
North America dominates this industry and is expected to witness the highest CAGR over the forecast period. APAC is a smaller market, but it holds good growth potential for the future, driven mainly by India and China. An aging population, changes in healthcare needs and social structure, and rising hospitalization costsare likely to drive the market for oxygen delivery systems, health monitoring devices, mobility equipment, measurement tools, and other such home healthcare devices.
Increasing regulatory interference in the home healthcare devices industry, huge socioeconomic diversity among populations, especially in emerging economies, and healthcare infrastructure are some of the challenges being faced by the industry. Lucintel’s research indicates thatthe introduction of new technology such as remote monitoring devices, web-based technologies, increasing use of software applications, and other technological innovations will likely change the face of the global home healthcare device industry.
Lucintel’s study provides a concise overview of the Global Home Healthcare Device industry. The report tracks four regions of the industry. This study includes manufacturers as well as distributors of home healthcare devices.
For a detailed table of contents and pricing information on this timely, insightful report, contact Lucintel at +1-972-636-5056 or via email at helpdesk(at)lucintel(dot)com. Lucintel provides cutting-edge decision support services that facilitate critical decisions with greater speed, insight, and cost efficiency. To learn more, visithttp://www.lucintel.com.

Monday, October 27, 2014

Vitamin D deficiency linked to high blood pressure


Thursday June 26 2014
Most people generate the majority of the vitamin D in their body from sunlight
Vitamin D helps keep the bones strong

"Vitamin D supplements could help high blood pressure," The Independent reports. The paper reports on new research into genetic variations associated with low vitamin D levels and their relationship with blood pressure.
Researchers pooled 35 studies of nearly 100,000 people with a European background. They found that the lower the vitamin D levels, the higher blood pressure was.
But they did not look at whether vitamin D supplements or exposure to sunlight would lower blood pressure. And, similarly, they also did not look at whether a lowering of blood pressure improves health outcomes.
These findings are also limited by the fact the study only included people with a European background. It is therefore unclear whether a similar association would be found in other ethnicities.
It is important to have adequate vitamin D levels, as deficiency can cause symptoms such as tiredness, general aches and pains, and, if more severe, rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults.
Read our special report about the alleged health benefits of vitamin D.

Where did the story come from?

The study was carried out by researchers from universities across the UK, Ireland, Norway, Germany, the US, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Croatia, Austria, the Netherlands and Australia.
It was partly funded by the British Heart Foundation, the UK Medical Research Council, the National Institute for Health Research, the NHS, and the Academy of Finland.
Other funding sources for the studies included in this research were drug companies, food manufacturers and lifestyle companies across Europe.
The study was published in the peer-reviewed medical journal The Lancet: Diabetes and Endocrinology. It has been published on an open access basis, so it is free to read online.
The quality of the media's reporting of the study was mixed. While the overall findings of the study were reported accurately, many news sources jumped to the conclusion that supplements or sunlight exposure could lower blood pressure. For example, the Daily Express claimed that, "Sunshine is the best way to get your daily dose". It is unclear what evidence, if any, this claim is based on.

What kind of research was this?

This research was a meta-analysis that pooled the results of 35cohort studies. It aimed to further knowledge about any association between vitamin D levels and high blood pressure.
Previous observational studies have shown an association between low vitamin D and an increased risk of hypertension (high blood pressure) and cardiovascular disease.
It has proved difficult to measure vitamin D levels over time, however. It would be unethical to design a study where one group of people were made to have low levels of vitamin D because of the risk of adverse effects, such as bone damage.
The researchers therefore had to find an alternative way of comparing people with different levels of vitamin D. They did this by looking at variations in four genes involved in the production and metabolism (breakdown) of vitamin D in a large population sample.
The researchers hypothesised that these genes should have an influence on lifelong vitamin D levels, so they could be used to look for an association with blood pressure and hypertension.
This type of study cannot prove causation – that is, it cannot prove that low vitamin D causes high blood pressure. A randomised controlled trial making use of vitamin D supplements would be required to do this.

What did the research involve?

The researchers pooled results from 35 cohort studies of people with European ancestry from Europe and North America. This included 31 adult studies (99,582 people) and four adolescent studies (8,591).
Genetic analysis recorded the status of four genes, two of which affect the production and two that affect the metabolism of vitamin D. Variations in these genes (called single-nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPs) have previously been associated with lower levels of vitamin D.
Actual vitamin D levels were available for participants in 19 of the studies (51,122).
Blood pressure measurements were provided for all of the studies. They defined hypertension (high blood pressure) as a systolic blood pressure reading of 140mmHg or higher, a diastolic reading of 90mmHg or higher, or current use of antihypertensive drugs. This definition would be considered reasonable by most experts.
If people were taking antihypertensive drugs, they added 15mmHg to the systolic reading and 10mmHg to the diastolic reading to account for the likely effect of the drugs.
The researchers then analysed the results, looking for any associations between:
  • actual vitamin D levels and high blood pressure
  • actual vitamin D levels and variations in each of the four genes 
  • genetic variations in combination with vitamin D levels and high blood pressure
The results were adjusted for age, body mass index (BMI), sex and geographical region. Blood samples for vitamin D concentrations were adjusted for the month when the sample was taken to account for increased levels related to sun exposure, as well as laboratory and total cholesterol and triglycerides.

What were the basic results?

Without taking the genetic component into account, increased vitamin D concentrations were associated with reduced systolic blood pressure and reduced risk of hypertension. There was no association with diastolic blood pressure.
These results did not differ after accounting for age, sex, the method of blood pressure measurement, geographical region or BMI.
All four vitamin D-related single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the genes involved in the production and metabolism of vitamin D were strongly associated with vitamin D concentrations.
In other words, the results confirmed previous reports that genetic variations of these genes are associated with a reduction in the concentration of vitamin D.
Grouping people by the two genes involved in the production of vitamin D, every 10% increase in vitamin D concentration was associated with:
  • reduced systolic blood pressure of 0.37mmHg (95%confidence interval [CI] 0.003 to 0.73)
  • reduced diastolic blood pressure of 0.29mmHg (95% CI 0.07 to 0.52)
  • 8.1% reduced odds of hypertension (odds ratio [OR] 0.92, 95% CI 0.87 to 0.97)
When analysing each of the four genes without taking the vitamin D concentration into account:
  • only one of the genes involved in the production of vitamin D showed an association with reduced diastolic blood pressure and risk of hypertension
  • there was no association if both genes involved in vitamin D production were looked at together, unless the results were combined with other larger studies, where they were associated with a reduced risk of hypertension
  • there was no association between the two genes involved in vitamin D metabolism and any blood pressure outcome

How did the researchers interpret the results?

The researchers concluded that, "The results suggest that people who have genetic variants associated with low endogenous production of 25(OH)D [low vitamin D] have an increased risk of hypertension, emphasising the need for further, well-designed randomised controlled trials to assess causality and the potential clinical benefits of vitamin D supplementation.
The go on to say that, "In view of the costs and side effects associated with antihypertensive drugs, the possibility of preventing or reducing hypertension with vitamin D supplementation is very attractive.
"However, because we cannot exclude the possibility that the findings from this study were caused by chance, they need to be replicated in an independent, similarly powered study."

Conclusion

This study has found an association between increased vitamin D levels and reduced blood pressure and risk of hypertension. This was also found when the vitamin D concentration level was taken in combination with a normal genetic ability to produce vitamin D.
However, this study cannot prove that lower levels of vitamin D cause high blood pressure, or that taking vitamin D supplements would reduce high blood pressure – other factors could account for the results.
The researchers did try to limit this, however, by accounting for some obvious confounding factors, such as age, sex, triglycerides and total cholesterol.
The study's strengths include the large number of participants, although they were all of European descent, so it is not known if the results could be directly applicable to other ethnicities.
Limitations with this type of study design include using the genetic variations as a proxy for lifetime vitamin D levels. The genetic variations may have led to biological adaptations to compensate.
It is also not known whether the level of sun exposure would actually have a greater effect on vitamin D levels than these genetic variations.
In addition, it may be the case that the genetic variations influence other metabolic pathways independently of their effects on vitamin D levels and therefore on blood pressure.
Either way, it is important to have adequate levels of vitamin D, as deficiency can cause symptoms such as tiredness, general aches and pains, and, if more severe, rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults.
Most people don't need to take supplements to get the recommended amount of vitamin D. You can get vitamin D in two ways: through your diet and moderate exposure to sunlight.
Foods rich in vitamin D include:
  • oily fish, such as salmon, sardines and mackerel
  • eggs
  • fortified fat spreads
  • fortified breakfast cereals
  • powdered milk
Regularly going outside for a few minutes in the middle of the day without wearing sunscreen between April and October should provide enough exposure to create sufficient vitamin D.
You certainly don't need to get a suntan, let alone risk sunburn. Overexposure to the sun in this way can increase your risk of skin cancer.
Analysis by Bazian. Edited by NHS ChoicesFollow Behind the Headlines on TwitterJoin the Healthy Evidence forum.