Blood Pressure and Sleep: What's the Connection? Pinellas Park FL

Chronic lack of sleep can do more than just leave you feeling drowsy the next day, it can lead to a constellation of serious health problems, including obesity, type 2 diabetes, mood disorders, cardiovascular disease and hypertension (high blood pressure).

Park Animal Hospital
(727) 546-9828
8065 66th St N
Pinellas Park, FL
Karl D Jones MD
(727) 525-1134
5800 49th St N
Saint Petersburg, FL
Peter L Sarkos MD
(727) 384-4972
7855 38th Ave N
Saint Petersburg, FL
Fit Feet For Life
(727) 362-2920
900 Carillon Parkway, Suite 301
St. Petersburg, FL
Spinal Correction Centers-Saint Petersburg
(727) 362-3133
3500 38th Ave N
Saint Petersburg, FL
Lake Seminole Animal Hospital
(727) 393-4644
8578 Park Boulevard
Seminole, FL
Raheb Family Chiropractic
(727) 537-6928
6705 38th Ave N #B1
St Petersburg, FL
La Torre Chiropractic
(727) 362-3278
2150 49th St N # C
St Petersburg, FL
Bay Area Wellness Center, Inc.
(727) 327-4522
3600 1st Ave N
St Petersburg, FL
Brett R Bolhofner, MD
(727) 527-5272
4600 4th St N
Saint Petersburg, FL
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Blood Pressure and Sleep: What's the Connection?

Chronic lack of sleep can do more than just leave you feeling drowsy the next day, it can lead to a constellation of serious health problems, including obesity, type 2 diabetes, mood disorders, cardiovascular disease and hypertension (high blood pressure). Several studies are now showing a link between long-term sleep deprivation-less than five or six hours of sleep a night-and high blood pressure.

A study published in Hypertension: Journal of the American Hearth Association in 2007, found that people between the ages of 32 and 59 who slept five hours or less a night were "over twice as likely to develop hypertension than subjects reporting getting seven to eight hours of sleep a night," according to James E. Gangwisch, Ph.D., assistant professor at Columbia University Medical Center, in New York City, and lead author of the study. A more recent study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that people who slept fewer hours a night were more likely to have higher systolic (top number) and diastolic (bottom number) blood pressure, the measurement used to determine hypertension. According to guidelines by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health, normal blood pressure is now defined as less than 120 mm Hg systolic pressure and less than 80 mm Hg diastolic pressure.

Uncontrolled high blood pressure, which affects nearly 74 million Americans, is often referred to as the "silent killer" because it's usually asymptomatic and can lead to such serious ailments as stroke, heart attack, heart failure or kidney failure. According to some researchers, the causal link between lack of sleep and hypertension may be that short periods of sleep (less than six hours a night) increase an individual's average 24-hour blood pressure and heart rate, which, over time, may lead to persistent high blood pressure. ..

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