Transcendental meditation
(TM) reduces hypertension and cuts down on the need
for blood pressure-lowering medications, according to
a study in black Americans.
For many patients with
high blood pressure, "it may be practical and feasible
to lower blood pressure using the TM technique and thereby
reduce or eliminate the use of antihypertensive drugs
and their side effects," study co-author Dr. Frank Staggers
Jr., senior drug detoxification specialist at the Haight
Ashbury Free Clinic's Drug Rehabilitation Program, San
Francisco, said in a prepared statement.
The findings appear in
a recent issue of the American Journal of Hypertension.
In the study, 150 black
men and women with stage I hypertension (average blood
pressure readings of 142/95 mm Hg) were randomly assigned
to three groups: TM, progressive muscle relaxation,
or conventional health education classes. Nearly two-thirds
of participants were taking blood pressure-lowering
medications at the start of the study.
By the end of one year,
blood pressure in the TM group was reduced by an average
of 3 mm systolic pressure and nearly 6mm diastolic pressure
(the top and bottom numbers in a reading, respectively).
Patients in the other two groups achieved an average
reduction of 3 mm diastolic pressure and no change in
systolic pressure.
There was also a 23 percent
relative reduction in use of antihypertensive drugs
between the TM and the other two groups.
According to Staggers,
TM-related reductions in blood pressure and the need
for medications "would be expected to result in major
health-care cost savings and the prevention of adverse
side effects associated with blood pressure drugs."
More
information on how the prevent high blood pressure.
The U.S. National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute has more about high
blood pressure.