High Blood Pressure
URL of this page: http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/highbloodpressure.html
Also called: HBP, HTN, Hypertension
Blood pressure is the force of your blood pushing against the walls of your arteries. Each time your heart beats, it pumps out blood into the arteries. Your blood pressure is highest when your heart beats, pumping the blood. This is called systolic pressure. When your heart is at rest, between beats, your blood pressure falls. This is the diastolic pressure.
Your blood pressure reading uses these two numbers, the systolic and diastolic pressures. Usually they are written one above or before the other. A reading of
- 120/80 or lower is normal blood pressure
- 140/90 or higher is high blood pressure
- Between 120 and 139 for the top number, or between 80 and 89 for the bottom number is prehypertension
NIH: National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
página MedlinePlus de accesos múltiples:
High Blood Pressure: MedlinePlus
MEDICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA
National Institutes of Health
- The primary NIH organization for research on High Blood Pressure is the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
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