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Brain and blood vessels

Early brain changes may be linked to high blood pressure

Most people think of high blood pressure as a condition that affects the heart. Others may associate it with stroke or kidney disease. What receives less attention is the possibility that changes inside the brain could begin much earlier than many people expect. Emerging research suggests that hypertension may influence brain cells, blood vessels, and …

High-blood-pressure-damage-the-brain

Memory changes are sometimes linked to high blood pressure

Many people expect high blood pressure to affect the heart. What often receives less attention is the brain. Researchers have spent years studying the relationship between hypertension and cognitive health, and evidence suggests that the condition may influence memory, thinking, and learning in ways that are not always obvious at first. For some adults, the …

Eye exam for hypertension

How high blood pressure can quietly affect your eyesight

Many people think of high blood pressure as a condition that mainly affects the heart. What often goes unnoticed is that the eyes contain some of the body’s most delicate blood vessels. When blood pressure remains elevated for months or years, those vessels can become damaged, sometimes affecting vision before a person realizes anything is …

Hypertension affecting body organs

How high blood pressure affects the body over time

Many adults think of high blood pressure as a number that appears during a doctor’s appointment. What often gets missed is that hypertension is really a condition that affects blood vessels throughout the body. The consequences may take years to develop, which is why many people feel completely normal while damage slowly progresses in the …

Checking blood pressure at home.

High blood pressure may affect daily life sooner than expected

Many people think of high blood pressure as a future problem. Something that might matter years from now. What often gets overlooked is how elevated blood pressure can begin affecting everyday life long before a heart attack, stroke, or other major complication occurs. Some adults feel completely normal. Others notice subtle changes in energy, sleep, …

Checking blood pressure at home.

High blood pressure often causes damage before you feel it

Many people assume they would notice if something was seriously wrong with their health. That assumption is one reason high blood pressure can be so dangerous. Hypertension often develops quietly, causing damage inside the body long before symptoms become obvious. Some adults feel completely normal for years while elevated blood pressure slowly affects their blood …

Adult checking high blood pressure

The simplest blood pressure habits are often the most powerful

When people are diagnosed with high blood pressure, many immediately start looking for the perfect diet, the best supplement, or the newest health trend. But blood pressure rarely changes because of one dramatic decision. More often, it reflects the small choices repeated every day. The foods you eat, how well you sleep, how much you …

High Blood Pressure

Why waiting until 140 may already be too late for blood pressure

For years, many people believed that blood pressure only became a concern once the top number reached 140. If a reading came back at 130 or 135, it was often viewed as something to watch rather than something that required action. Today, that thinking is changing. Growing evidence suggests that waiting until blood pressure reaches …

Alcohol and blood pressure.

Alcohol and blood pressure: the connection many people underestimate

When people think about high blood pressure, they often blame salt, stress, aging, or lack of exercise. Alcohol is not always part of the conversation. Yet growing evidence suggests that drinking habits may have a greater impact on blood pressure than many people realize. For some adults, alcohol can influence blood pressure directly. For others, …

Checking blood pressure in winter.

Cold weather can make blood pressure harder to control

As temperatures drop, many people focus on staying warm and avoiding seasonal illnesses. But winter can also affect something less obvious: blood pressure. Some adults notice higher blood pressure readings during colder months, even when their diet, medications, and daily routines have not changed significantly. For people already living with hypertension, understanding how cold weather …