� Your  blood pressure changes from hour to hour, sometimes minute to minute. Standing  up from a hot seat, watching an exciting bear witness, eating a meal, or being stressed-perhaps because of a visit to the doctor-all influence your parentage pressure. Blood  pressure readings jump around so much that you are more than likely to get an accurate reading if you check it at home rather than in the doctor's situation, reports the September  2008 issue of the Harvard  Heart  Letter.  
The  idea underlies a new recommendation from the American  Heart  Association  urgency individuals with high blood pressure or at high risk for developing it to become do-it-yourselfers, for a turn of reasons: 
Find  your real blood pressure: In  some individuals, the doctor's office snapshot tells the whole story and is an excellent approximation of their usual pressure. In  others, it isn't. 
Track  your progress: Checking  your blood press at home lets you know whether your life style changes and medications ar having their desired personal effects. 
Save  time and medications: Home  measure may miserly fewer trips to the doctor's office. If  you have "white-coat" hypertension-a climb in rip pressure when you go to the doctor-it whitethorn also mean taking fewer medications. 
Watch  the video
If  you prefer to metre your blood pressure at home, technique matters. A  free instructional video from Harvard  Health  Publications,  on-line at hypertext transfer protocol://www.wellness.harvard.edu/128, shows Harvard  Heart  Letter  editor Patrick  J.  Skerrett  demonstrating the right fashion to take a blood pressure reading at home. This  web page likewise offers tips for choosing a home blood press monitor. 
Also  in this issue: 
- Aches  and pains from statins
- Removing  faulty pacemaker wires
- Mediterranean  diet wards off pith disease
- Chest  pain (angina) common after heart attacks
- Heart  disease a leading killer among people with HIV/AIDS
-  Is  there a connection betwixt statins, muscle pain, and coenzyme Q10?  
The  Harvard  Heart  Letter  is available from Harvard  Health  Publications,  the publication division of Harvard  Medical  School,  for $24 per year. Subscribe  at hTTP://www.health.harvard.edu/heart. 
American  Heart  Association
More  info
Saturday, 6 September 2008
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