Huge study finds a
billion people suffer from high blood pressure
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[November 16, 2016]
By Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - The number of people
with high blood pressure has almost doubled in 40 years to over 1.1
billion worldwide, scientists said on Wednesday, with the burden of the
condition shifting from the rich to the poor.
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In the largest study of its kind analyzing blood pressure in every
nation between 1975 and 2015, the scientists said that it has
dropped sharply in wealthy countries - possibly due to healthier
diets and lifestyles - but risen in poorer ones.
The increases are especially significant in Africa and South Asia,
the researchers said, and could be partly due to poor nutrition in
childhood.
High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, puts extra strain
on the blood vessels and major organs such as the heart, brain and
kidneys. It is the world's top cause of cardiovascular disease,
which leads to strokes and heart attacks, and is estimated to cause
7.5 million deaths a year worldwide.
Led by World Health Organization researchers working with hundreds
of scientists internationally, this study covered blood pressure
measurements from nearly 20 million people and was published in The
Lancet medical journal.
In Europe, Britain had the lowest proportion of people with high
blood pressure in 2015. South Korea, the United States and Canada
had the lowest hypertension rates in the world.
More than half the world's adults with high blood pressure in 2015
lived in Asia, the study estimated. Some 226 million people in China
have high blood pressure, it said, as do 200 million in India.
"High blood pressure is no longer related to affluence - as it was
in 1975 - but is now a major health issue linked with poverty," said
Majid Ezzati, a professor at Imperial College London's school of
public health.
He said that while he could not be sure of why the data showed high
blood pressure as more of a problem in poorer countries, it may be
partly due to overall better health and more consumption of fruit
and vegetables in wealthy societies.
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In rich countries, the condition is also caught more frequently and
earlier, and managed more effectively with medicines, Ezzati said.
Blood pressure is defined by two numbers - systolic pressure, which
represents the force with which the heart pumps blood into the blood
vessels, and diastolic pressure, a measure of the resistance to the
blood flow in the body's blood vessels.
Both numbers are measured in millimetres of mercury (mmHg). High
blood pressure is defined as 140/90 mmHg or higher.
The condition is caused by a number of factors including having a
diet high in salt and low in fruit and vegetables, and not taking
enough exercise.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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