In international study has found that people in their 50s with normal blood pressure could live up to five years longer than those with
In international study has found that people in their 50s with normal blood pressure could live up to five years longer than those with hypertension or high blood pressure.
The study found that people who had normal blood pressure developed heart disease later in life than people with high blood pressure. The study has been published in the current issue of Hypertension: Journal of the American Heart Association. It followed up 3128 people who celebrated their 50th birthday while enrolled in the Framingham Heart Study, which looks at risk factors for heart disease. The Framingham Heart Study was started in Massachusetts in 1948 to look at risk factors for heart disease.It was the first study of a large and continuously monitored group showing the effect of high blood pressure on life expectancy overall and on life expectancy in people with cardiovascular disease, heart attack and stroke.
The research showed that people with normal blood pressure lived five years longer on average than people with high blood pressure and on average developed cardiovascular disease (or died) 7.2 years later.
Research team member Dr Anna Peeters, from the Monash University Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, said the study provided clear evidence that preventing high blood pressure could prolong life and lead to a better quality of life in later years.
"What is really surprising is the unexpectedly large number of years difference in life expectancy between those with hypertension and those without," she said.
"And while those with lower blood pressure lived longer, they also lived healthier lives."
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The study was based at Erasmus University Rotterdam, in The Netherlands and involved members from Monash University, the Federal Knowledge Center for Health Care in Belgium, and the Scientific Institute of Public Health, Belgium.
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Diane Squires
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61-39-905-9315
Research Australia
(Source: www.eureka alert.org)