Your blood pressure is the force exerted by your heart, against the resistance created by the arteries, to keep blood flowing through your body. Your blood pressure is high (hypertension) when the force is excessive.
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A sophisticated pump and pipe system
Blood pressure is the pressure exerted by the blood, on the
walls of the arteries. Your heart functions as a muscular pump, that
contracts rhythmically and squirts blood into your arteries. From there
your blood is channeled to your entire body, through a circulatory system of
smaller vessels. In this way, oxygen is delivered to all your living
tissue.
The resistance offered by these arteries and the smaller
arterioles is very significant. Constriction of the muscle in the artery
wall causes it to narrow, which increases the resistance and hence the pressure
within. This can be compared to taking a garden hose and reducing the
opening at the nozzle. Pressure in a hose, can of course also be raised by
increasing the amount of water flowing from the tap. Similarly, the amount of
circulating blood, and the strength of the heart muscle contractions, can also
influence your blood pressure.
If your blood pressure is too high, your heart must work
much harder to maintain adequate blood flow to your body.
The terminology
If your blood pressure is recorded as 120/80, the number on top is the systolic pressure, and the bottom number the diastolic. It is measured in millimeters of mercury.
120/80mm Hg also happens to be the optimal blood pressure.
Systolic pressure is the pressure
generated by each heartbeat. This occurs during the contraction of the
heartmuscle, which is called a systole. Diastolic blood pressure
is the pressure between the heartbeats when the heart is
resting. Systolic pressure is obviously always higher than diastolic blood pressure. Pulse pressure is the difference between the two
readings. If any of these are significantly elevated, it increases the risk
for heart disease, stroke or kidney damage.
Essential to life Blood pressure is
essential to life. In fact when a person dies of so-called “shock”, it
usually implies events that cause a fatal drop in blood pressure. This
leads to inadequate perfusion of vital organs like the brain and
kidneys. Starved from their life-giving source of oxygen, these organs
cannot function anymore. Blood pressure varies during the day
Considerable variation occurs in all people, depending
on the demands of the body. When doing exercise, the muscles require more
oxygen, and with the increase in heart rate and pumping action as result,
the blood pressure is raised. Anxiety, when being startled or feeling threatened,
also raises the blood pressure through the effects of the “fight or flight”
response. Experiencing pain can also raise pressure dramatically.
Alcohol, nicotine and caffeine intake can cause transient elevations of blood
pressure.
Some people have high blood pressure only in a clinical
setting, so-called white coat hypertension, with normal readings otherwise.
Blood pressure rises when you are active and falls when
you are inactive. During restful sleep, the inactivity reduces the demand
for oxygen and therefore blood pressure is usually lowest at night and highest during
arousal in the morning.
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