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Health
Superwomen Under
Pressure
by Neeta Lal
After having been
crowned the diabetes capital of the world - with a whopping 40
million diabetics - India has now segued into the league of nations
with the highest number of high blood pressure patients. According
to the reputed British medical journal, 'The Lancet', a staggering
150 million Indians - nearly half of them women - suffer from high
blood pressure, a precursor to a raft of life-threatening illnesses
such as stroke, hemorrhage, diabetes, paralysis and blindness.
"Nowadays, almost every other patient I come across
has high blood pressure," admits Dr Sanjay Mahajan,
general physician and Consultant, Kailash Hospital,
Noida. "The magnitude of the problem is engulfing all
sections of society and we need to tackle it on a war
footing."
High blood pressure, according to Dr Mahajan, is a
lifestyle-linked disorder triggered by smoking,
alcohol abuse, obesity, high salt intake, lack of
exercise, and stress. "It is also genetic," he adds.
"Family history of hypertension and stroke can trigger
high blood pressure which - if untreated - can climax
in a fatal heart attack or brain stroke."
Hypertension or blood pressure, also known as the
silent killer or the scourge of modern times, afflicts
40 per cent of the urban Indian populace and 10 per
cent of the rural populace. According to Dr Anoop
Mishra of Fortis Hospital, New Delhi, hypertension
accounts for 57 per cent of deaths in India due to
stroke and 24 per cent of deaths caused by heart
attack.
But what is blood pressure and how does it impact
one's health? Blood pressure is the force of the blood
pushing against the walls of the arteries. Each time
the heart beats (about 60-70 times a minute, at rest),
it pumps blood into the arteries. Blood pressure is at
its highest when the heart beats while pumping blood.
This is called "systolic pressure". Between heart
beats, the pressure falls and is termed "diastolic
pressure".
Both are important, according to doctors. Blood
pressure keeps fluctuating through the course of the
day, dropping when one rests and rising when one is
active. It also gets spiked when one is excited,
nervous or active. Still, for most of one's waking
hours, the blood pressure stays pretty much the same.
This level, recommend doctors, should be lower than
120/80. When the level stays high, 140/90 or higher,
it is technically termed as high blood pressure. "With
high blood pressure," explains Dr Mahajan, "the heart
has to work harder, the arteries are put under
tremendous pressure and chances of getting a stroke,
heart attack and kidney problems magnify."
Unfortunately, there's no single cause for high blood
pressure, also known as primary blood pressure. In
some people, high blood pressure could be the
manifestation of another medical problem or
medication. However, even after one's blood pressure stabilizes (due to medication, lifestyle modification
or both), and one is under treatment for it, doctors
still consider one as a patient even if one registers
repeated readings in the normal range.
According to the 'International Journal of Medical
Sciences (2007), the prevalence of hypertension has
increased by about 30 times among urban dwellers in
India and about 10 times amongst the villagers.
Various factors have fuelled this rising trend - urbanization, diet, stress, increased population, and
shrinking employment opportunities being some of them.
Amongst women, the primary causes of blood pressure
are professional / relationship stress, a sedentary
lifestyle and improper eating habits. Another
associated cause, point out gynecologists, is
menopause. "With advancing age and menopause,"
elaborates gynecologist and obstetrician Dr Tripat
Chowdhury of Spring Meadows Hospital, New Delhi, "a
woman's level of estrogen (steroid hormones) plummets.
This causes hardening of the arteries which impacts
blood pressure levels too."
According to research, the consumption of oral
contraceptives also has a bearing on a woman's blood
pressure levels. In fact, a nurses' health study in
the US has established that high blood pressure is two
to three times more common in women taking oral
contraceptives, for five years or longer, than in
those not consuming them.
The study, investigating the risk of developing high
blood pressure from taking oral contraceptives,
followed the health trajectory of more than 100,000
American nurses who were asked about use of oral
contraceptives and their blood pressure on three
occasions over a four-year period. The principal
finding was that hypertension was about 80 per cent
higher in the women taking oral contraceptives for
more than six years.
However, given today's lifestyle and work pressures,
there's no denying that a modern woman is under a lot
of stress from multiple quarters. This stress gets
further magnified in the Indian context due to
socio-economic factors like the changing dynamics of
the family structure, lack of reliable domestic help,
increased pressure at the workplace to get ahead and
relationship stress.
But, as doctors advise, keep it simple. "Indian women
are victims of the superwoman syndrome," opines Dr
Neelanjana Singh, Consultant Dietician, Pushpawati
Singhania Research Institute, New Delhi. "They need to
lighten up a bit, find some quality 'me' time and
exercise as often as they can. Their diet should
include lots of whole grains, fruits, veggies, nuts,
minerals and vitamins. This can be their complete
arsenal against high blood pressure in these
stress-ridden times."
October 7,
2007
By arrangement with
WFS
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