The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The pandemic has many folks’ blood pressure up

Chronic health conditions such as hypertensi­on must still be managed, study shows.

- Roni Caryn Rabin

Last year was a tough one. Americans grappled with a global pandemic, the loss of loved ones, lockdowns that splintered social networks, stress, unemployme­nt and depression.

It is probably no surprise that the nation’s blood pressure shot up.

On Monday, scientists reported that blood pressure measuremen­ts of nearly a half-million adults showed a significan­t rise last year, compared with the previous year.

These measuremen­ts describe the pressure of blood against the walls of the arteries. Over time, increased pressure can damage the heart, the brain, blood vessels, kidneys and eyes. Sexual function can also be affected.

“These are very important data that are not surprising, but are shocking,” said Dr. Donald M. Lloyd-jones, president of the American Heart Associatio­n, who was not involved in the study.

“Even small changes in average blood pressure in the population,” he added, “can have a huge impact on the number of strokes, heart failure events and heart attacks that we’re likely to be seeing in the coming months.”

The study, published as a research letter in the journal Circulatio­n, is a stark reminder that even in the midst of a pandemic that has claimed more than 785,000 American lives and disrupted access to health care, chronic health conditions must still be managed.

Almost half of all American adults have hypertensi­on, or high blood pressure, a chronic condition referred to as a “silent killer” because it can have life-threatenin­g consequenc­es, though it produces few symptoms.

Hypertensi­on may also put people at greater risk for severe disease if they are infected with the coronaviru­s. (The evidence for that link is mixed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)

The new study, by researcher­s at the Cleveland Clinic and Quest Diagnostic­s, examined data from hundreds of thousands of employees and family members who participat­ed in a wellness programs that tracked blood pressure and other health indicators, like weight. The participan­ts, from all 50 states and the District of Columbia, included people who had elevated blood pressure and normal blood pressure at the start of the study.

“We observed that people weren’t exercising as much during the pandemic, weren’t getting regular care, were drinking more and sleeping less,” said Dr. Luke Laffin, the lead author, a preventive cardiologi­st who is co-director of the Center for Blood Pressure Disorders at the Cleveland Clinic. “We wanted to know, was their blood pressure changing during the pandemic?”

The researcher­s found that blood pressure readings changed little from 2019 to the first three months of 2020, but increased significan­tly from April 2020 through December 2020, compared with the same period in 2019.

The average age of the study participan­ts was just over 45, and slightly more than half were women. But critics said the failure to include informatio­n on the race and the ethnicity of participan­ts was a significan­t weakness in the study, as hypertensi­on is much more prevalent among Black Americans than among white or Hispanic Americans.

 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? “We observed that people weren’t exercising as much during the pandemic, weren’t getting regular care, were drinking more and sleeping less,” said Dr. Luke Laffin, a preventive cardiologi­st at the Cleveland Clinic.
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE “We observed that people weren’t exercising as much during the pandemic, weren’t getting regular care, were drinking more and sleeping less,” said Dr. Luke Laffin, a preventive cardiologi­st at the Cleveland Clinic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States