|
Moderate
Lifestyle Changes
Control Hypertension
Excerpt
By Adam Marcus,
HealthScoutNews
A change of heart about your diet and exercise habits can help
you keep a lid on your blood pressure -- but you have to be committed
to the conversion.
New research shows people who cut
down on salt and alcohol while losing weight and getting regular
exercise do indeed control their blood pressure. Going a step
further by adopting a low-fat diet high in fruits and vegetables
works even better, but the added benefit isn't quite as great
as many researchers may have suspected.
Even so, the scientists say, the
results indicate people can pick and choose from a buffet of lifestyle
changes to make a dent in their blood pressure. "You can
combine all these things together, and that's pretty encouraging,"
says Victor J. Stevens, a psychologist at the Kaiser Permanente
Center for Health Research in Portland, Ore., and a co-author
of the study.
Nearly 50 million Americans, or
about a quarter of the adult population, have high blood pressure
-- defined as a reading of at least 140 millimeters of mercury
(mmHg) for the systolic (the top number) and 90 mmHg for the diastolic
(the bottom number). High blood pressure raises the risk of heart
attacks and stroke and can seriously damage other organs, including
the kidneys. The ideal blood pressure is 120/80.
"Reducing your blood pressure
by even a few millimeters makes a difference," Stevens says.
"The more pressure there is, the faster your circulatory
system wears out."
The latest study, reported in the
April 23/30 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association,
included 810 men and women with higher than optimal blood pressure,
38 percent of whom had clinical hypertension. Their average age
was 50.
A third of the subjects received
a single counseling session, typically with a registered dietitian,
about the importance of diet in controlling their blood pressure.
They were then left on their own to alter their behaviors.
The rest were assigned to two groups,
both of which received much more intensive advice -- as many as
18 sessions over a six-month period -- about the link between
lifestyle and hypertension. They were told to lose weight if they
needed to, to get at least three hours a week of moderate exercise,
and to cut down on their salt and alcohol intake.
Subjects in one of these two groups
also were advised to adopt the so-called DASH (Dietary Approaches
to Stop Hypertension) diet, a low-fat meal plan that emphasizes
fruits and vegetables and cuts back on red meat. It has been shown
to help lower blood pressure.
People in all three groups saw
their blood pressure drop, but those who received intensive counseling
reaped far more benefits. Their blood pressure came down more
on average, and fewer developed high blood pressure. They were
also more likely to lose a significant amount of weight, and less
likely to require drugs to control their hypertension.
The improvement was best for those
who had the intensive counseling and the DASH diet, with blood
pressure falling twice as much, on average, compared with the
first group. Yet the addition of the DASH diet to aggressive lifestyle
counseling only slightly reduced blood pressure compared with
lifestyle changes alone. Losing weight had the greatest impact
on reducing blood pressure and keeping it in a healthy range.
The relatively weak impact of the
DASH diet in the latest study points up the challenge of implementing
behavioral programs outside the confines of a clinical trial,
says Dr. Thomas Pickering, a physician at Mount Sinai Medical
Center in New York. "When you are giving people food that
is already prepared [as previous studies with DASH did], you can
be pretty sure they're getting what you want them to have,"
says Pickering, author of an editorial accompanying the journal
article. But when they do it themselves they often dilute the
benefits of the diet.
Dr. Laura Svetkey, director of
the Duke Hypertension Center at Duke University and a study co-author,
says it's not clear why adding DASH to the counseling regime didn't
have a bigger effect. It may be that when it comes to blood pressure,
"maybe there's a maximum bang for the buck that you can get"
by altering behavior. Another factor, she says, is that people
in the study may not have eaten precisely the DASH diet prescribed
in earlier trials with the meal program.
But Svetkey says there are plenty
of good reasons to make the DASH diet part of a routine to control
or prevent hypertension. It is rich in calcium and thus good for
the bones, the low-fat content is easy on the heart, and the high
doses of fruits and vegetables can reduce the risk of certain
cancers.
Although the intensive counseling
is just that, Svetkey says "there's nothing magic" about
the regimen. All it requires is motivation, support and the willingness
to set small goals. "We simply asked people to eat a healthy
diet, eat reasonable portions, increase their physical activity
to a moderate level, and reduce their salt intake to recommended
levels," she says.
More information
Learn about high blood pressure
from Medline
plus or the American
Heart Association. Meanwhile, the National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Institute has a primer on the DASH
diet.
Reference
Source 101
For
more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|