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HealthWriting.com
White Coat
Hypertension
By Kathy
Summers
If you're so nervous during a
medical checkup that your blood pressure skyrockets, you may have
what's known as white-coat hypertension. That means your blood
pressure may only be high temporarily when your doctor tests it.
Your blood pressure also changes temporarily when you're physically
active, under stress or feeling emotional, but white-coat
hypertension occurs specifically from nervousness in the presence of
the doctor.
Blood pressure of less than 115/75 mm Hg is normal; between
120-139/80-89 is considered prehypertension; and above this level
(140/90 mm Hg or higher) is considered hypertension. According to
the National Hypertension Association, Inc., 20-35 percent of people
who have hypertension when a doctor measures their pressure have
normal blood pressure when they measure it at home or elsewhere in a
relaxed environment.
SHOULD YOU BE CONCERNED?
There are two potential problems associated with white-coat
hypertension. The first problem is that if your doctor diagnoses
hypertension based on his readings when you really only have
white-coat hypertension, you may end up taking drugs you don't need,
says Simeon Margolis, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of medicine and
biological chemistry at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Hypertensive drugs are not without side effects, he says, and they
probably aren't necessary for most people whose blood pressure is
normally low.
The second problem is that if you assume you have white-coat
hypertension rather than true hypertension, you may end up ignoring
potential problems. Some studies suggest white-coat hypertension
poses no increased risk, at least over the short term. Other
research suggests white-coat hypertension may be a transitional
condition to real hypertension. "That leads some people to think
that even if your blood pressure is only high when you visit a
doctor, you might be in trouble and you ought to do something about
it," says Margolis.
Adding to the confusion, the data on hypertension and the success of
drug treatments come from doctors' office measurements, says
Margolis, which undoubtedly include people who have white-coat
hypertension. So the experts don't always agree on whether to treat
white-coat hypertension medically or to wait and see if true
hypertension develops. Everyone's situation is different, so discuss
your specific concerns with your doctor.
If you have white-coat hypertension, you shouldn't ignore several
high blood pressure readings. If white-coat hypertension turns into
real hypertension, it can lead to stroke, heart attack and kidney
failure, which kill almost a million people each year and injure
another million. Hypertension is often called the "silent killer"
because it has no symptoms. Nearly one-third of people who have
hypertension don't know they have it, according to the American
Heart Association.
If you think you might have white-coat hypertension rather than
hypertension, here's what you can do.
AT THE DOCTOR'S:
wGet
the nurse to take your blood pressure. "For some reason
it's often not as high with the nurse as with the doctor," says
Margolis.
wGet
tested at the end of the visit. If your doctor takes a
quick history and immediately slaps on the blood pressure cuff, you
may end up with an abnormally high reading, says Margolis. You may
find it easier to relax at the end of the visit.
wExpect
variations. For best results you should sit quietly for
at least five minutes before your blood pressure is tested, and then
have it tested again at the end of your checkup, says Margolis, who
suspects few doctors or nurses take the time to do this. "There's no
doubt some people have elevated blood pressure only in a doctor's
office, but that's often the result of measurement errors."
ELSEWHERE:
wTest
at home. "You can buy an accurate blood pressure cuff for
under $100 that allows you to test your own blood pressure without
any help from anyone else," says Margolis. A device called a
sphygmomanometer comes with a cuff, a pressure registering system
and sometimes a stethoscope and comes in three varieties: mercury,
aneroid and automatic. For information on the advantages and
disadvantages of each type, visit the American Heart Association
website (americanheart.org).
wGet
automated. Some doctors have a device available that
automatically records blood pressure intermittently for 24 hours.
wImprove
lifestyle habits. If your numbers are elevated at the
doctor's office, they may be through the roof in seriously stressful
situations. To help keep your blood pressure in the good range,
don't smoke, get regular exercise, manage your weight, limit alcohol
to no more than one drink a day if you're a woman or two if you're a
man, eat a healthy diet low in saturated fat and cholesterol, and go
easy on the salt. --Kathy
Summers is a health, fitness and nutrition writer in Cave Creek, AZ. |