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Default Aug 24, 2011 at 11:23 AM
  #1
I'm having a problem with the medication for blood pressure. Anyone else here ever had a problem getting BP under control with several different medicines?

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Default Aug 24, 2011 at 07:54 PM
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I have high blood pressure too. My doctor put me on a low dose of propranolol and it's normal now.

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Default Aug 25, 2011 at 02:49 AM
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Propranolol is a great choice. There have been studies showing that it helps with removing some of the emotional impact of traumatic memories.

Drinking a lot of water can help with blood pressure, and so can regular exercise.

It helps if you can identify a specific reason for having high blood pressure like stress, diet, lack of exercise, too much caffeine.
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Default Aug 25, 2011 at 04:13 AM
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I am on three different blood pressure medications. You have to trust your doctor on prescribing the right medication. Also, if you are overweight, you need to lose weight (easier said than done, working on it myself). Watch your diet and stress does make BP worse. One of my blood pressure meds actually reduces my panic attacks and helps me be able to control them better. The doctor only prescribed it after I had an EKG. Talk to your doctor about your concerns.

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Default Aug 25, 2011 at 11:24 AM
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I am on three different blood pressure medications. You have to trust your doctor on prescribing the right medication. Also, if you are overweight, you need to lose weight (easier said than done, working on it myself). Watch your diet and stress does make BP worse. One of my blood pressure meds actually reduces my panic attacks and helps me be able to control them better. The doctor only prescribed it after I had an EKG. Talk to your doctor about your concerns.
Hi, Donna. Yes, like you, I was stabilized on a three-med regime for about ten years (HCTZ, Lisinopril & Metaprolol). Then last winter things started getting out of hand and both systolic and diastolic kept going up and up. Finally, in July, my doc doubled the Metaprolol. That didn't work. So he threw in some clonidine (fourth drug). That works but it makes me tired. So this week he switched the Clonidine to Amlodipine and we'll see how that works. I'll also be taking a renal artery test to see if that's clogged up and needs a stent.

I'd prefer not having a stroke right now. It would be very inconvenient. But I didn't spend years with uncontrolled BP, we controlled it as soon as it raised its ugly head. Unfortunately, it's all what they call "idiopathic," i.e., they don't know the cause. I do need to lose 20 pounds. Which I can do. As for the stress, I've been trying mindfulness meditation. I don't know how long that takes to have an effect. Do you?

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Default Aug 25, 2011 at 11:59 AM
  #6
Oh, how scary, Ygrec. My husband is on 3 meds I think but has always been pretty stable; he just turned 68 a couple days ago. I only have slightly elevated, "appropriate" for my age I think so I'm working with diet and exercise, etc. to keep track of it.

Do you know about telemonitoring? If you pay attention to it, apparently it responds :-)

http://www.nature.com/jhh/journal/va...h2010119a.html

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Wink Aug 25, 2011 at 12:31 PM
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Oh, how scary, Ygrec. My husband is on 3 meds I think but has always been pretty stable; he just turned 68 a couple days ago. I only have slightly elevated, "appropriate" for my age I think so I'm working with diet and exercise, etc. to keep track of it. Do you know about telemonitoring? If you pay attention to it, apparently it responds :-)
http://www.nature.com/jhh/journal/va...h2010119a.html
No, Perna, I hadn't heard about telemonitoring. I'll check out your link and see. What I have run across, but can't afford at the moment, is something called "Resperate," in which you and your husband might be interested. I'd buy it in a flash if I had the money:

http://www.resperate.com/us/welcome/...FYHt7QodiRNP9w

My diet is pretty good. Very low sodium and low fat. And now very low quantity so I can drop those pounds. I've been successful in the past every time I've wanted to lose weight, so I'm reasonably confident about being able to do it now.

It's true, and it's kind of strange, that there just aren't any symptoms. Nothing other than that reading on the machine. I have my own machine, of course, and take my BP three or four times a day. That could be part of what's "scary." I've heard on another forum that it could possibly be a symptom of clogging of the coronary arteries, which is something I'll raise with my cardiologist if the renal artery test proves negative. Well, you can only do what you can, I guess. Thanks for the sympathy!

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Default Aug 25, 2011 at 12:38 PM
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I've read about it and almost bought it! I took yoga (which, a good course teaches breathing) and that helped me a lot.

This book was helpful for me and a friend too: http://www.amazon.com/Blood-Pressure...4293843&sr=8-3

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Default Aug 26, 2011 at 01:55 AM
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Ygrec23, I take clonidine at bedtime because of the sedative affect. Getting your arteries checked is a good thing to do. My boss has had problems with her arteries clogging and one of the side affects is high blood pressure.

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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 06:19 AM
  #10
Biofeedback is another option. I don't know how much it costs to have some sessions with a practitioner who uses biofeedback, but maybe it would be covered by insurance if you have medication-resistant hypertension.

My hypertension is somewhat controlled (I take one medication), but it is always creeping back up there. It is usually pointless to even measure my BP at the doctor's office, because it shoots way up whenever I go there. It is lower when I monitor it on my own throughout the day. I found that I can get it lower by a few points by doing different things. Each thing might affect it just a point or two, but it adds up. Lowering salt in my diet helped a few points, as did taking flax seed oil, losing a few pounds, exercising, getting treatment for my sleep apnea, etc. I guess apnea can be a definite cause or contributor, so I throw that idea out to you in case you suspect you may have sleep apnea. The main symptoms are daytime sleepiness and snoring.

I looked at that resperate link and am intrigued. Wish it wasn't so expensive.

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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 08:10 AM
  #11
Nice to know we are all in the same boat. Its just not the psych issues! Dealing with medical issues is super tough and for someone that has an anxiety disorder, its super stressful
I am on a beta blocker. which is what comedians and actors sometimes take to ease the stage fright. It indeed works on anxiety and might have been the drug that someone else posted about. My blood pressure is good with my beta blocker.

I feel for you Ygrec. We don't need extra "stuff"!!!

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Heart Sep 05, 2011 at 10:25 AM
  #12
I have neuropathies in both arms (we think, now that my BP readings are all over the charts)... and suffer with chronic pain... my BP when I went into the ER in the flare was 185/100! Within 15 minutes of the shot it went down to 150/80. My resting BP is 117/76...
I cannot and will not try to take medication. I find more issues with the side effects of meds (and they just keep adding more drugs for those sides effects... etc) but use herbs for the same results without side effects.

I also am now doing my forms with tang soo do... which I've heard that even a few minutes of tai chi or quiet focussed movement immediately lowers pulse and BP. Immediately. So does meditation... so the combination of them, and learning to "hold" that calmness through out the day is my goal.

(Herbs you can take for BP are plenteous. )

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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 10:31 AM
  #13
I have had hypertension since I was 23....I am 60 now. My med always worked but a few moths ago I started passing out for no apparent reason. Spent a few days in the hospital and had to get a pacemaker installed. I am now part cyborg.

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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 10:41 AM
  #14
My gp tried at one point to take me OFF my beta blocker and try something else, but it just didn't work - I walked up the flight of stairs to my flat and my heart wouldn't stop beating (not in a good way!). I looked it up when Indie mentioned what she was on, I think it is different, one is "specific" one isn't, some business like that.

I did notice that the beta-blocker will raise triglycerides, because my gp has been chewing me out about that, and I thought I had been eating less! So I googled an antidote to those, and found l-carnitine, which is basically beef, and I do think I feel better when I eat meat, so I will try to add that to my diet and see if it helps. T (of the perfect body) says he uses protein powders.
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Wink Sep 05, 2011 at 11:00 AM
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My gp tried at one point to take me OFF my beta blocker and try something else, but it just didn't work - I walked up the flight of stairs to my flat and my heart wouldn't stop beating (not in a good way!). I looked it up when Indie mentioned what she was on, I think it is different, one is "specific" one isn't, some business like that.

I did notice that the beta-blocker will raise triglycerides, because my gp has been chewing me out about that, and I thought I had been eating less! So I googled an antidote to those, and found l-carnitine, which is basically beef, and I do think I feel better when I eat meat, so I will try to add that to my diet and see if it helps. T (of the perfect body) says he uses protein powders.
Hi, hankster, just a couple of comments on things you've said. My doc tells me that beta-blockers are extra good for keeping your pulse down, which is one of his aims for me. I take enough of them now so that I have a problem with it going too low, down in the fifties and forties. And I have the consequent triglyceride problem too. So when my cardio wanted me to go on a specific med to reduce triglycerides, I checked it out, didn't like the downside and told him no, I wouldn't. So he told me to take 3,000 mg per day of Omega 3 fish oil. Which I've done religiously. Now I have to go be tested to find out if it's working.

Does T tell you that protein powders will reduce triglycerides? Take care!

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Wink Sep 05, 2011 at 11:08 AM
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Originally Posted by (JD) View Post
I have neuropathies in both arms (we think, now that my BP readings are all over the charts)... and suffer with chronic pain... my BP when I went into the ER in the flare was 185/100! Within 15 minutes of the shot it went down to 150/80. My resting BP is 117/76...
I cannot and will not try to take medication. I find more issues with the side effects of meds (and they just keep adding more drugs for those sides effects... etc) but use herbs for the same results without side effects.

I also am now doing my forms with tang soo do... which I've heard that even a few minutes of tai chi or quiet focussed movement immediately lowers pulse and BP. Immediately. So does meditation... so the combination of them, and learning to "hold" that calmness through out the day is my goal.

(Herbs you can take for BP are plenteous. )
You know, JD, regarding your comment about tai chi or quiet focussed movement immediately having a beneficial effect, I've had some interesting experiences.

First, since my bp and pulse were all over the place and getting (sometimes) into dangerous areas, I set up a form on the computer for noting when I take my pills and every time I take my blood pressure and pulse. (My little machine gives both.) And sometimes I'd clock in with some really terrible numbers, either too high or too low. So I'd just take them again in ten minutes or so and note the results. Without fail, I tell you, absolutely without fail, on the second reading what was too high would come down and what was too low would come up. And not just once or twice, but dozens and dozens of times.

Which leads me to believe, rather strongly, that there are parts of our minds that can control BP and pulse rate, and the only question is how to harness them to work together with our conscious self all the time. So I know that a variety of techniques, mainly oriental but not all of them, are supposed to be able to help, but if we can make a direct connection with those parts of ourselves that are really in control, we may not need any esoteric techniques. Those techniques are just harnessing our own internal mental powers that we can possibly harness on our own. Just a thought! Take care.

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Wink Sep 05, 2011 at 11:14 AM
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Biofeedback is another option. I don't know how much it costs to have some sessions with a practitioner who uses biofeedback, but maybe it would be covered by insurance if you have medication-resistant hypertension.

My hypertension is somewhat controlled (I take one medication), but it is always creeping back up there. It is usually pointless to even measure my BP at the doctor's office, because it shoots way up whenever I go there. It is lower when I monitor it on my own throughout the day. I found that I can get it lower by a few points by doing different things. Each thing might affect it just a point or two, but it adds up. Lowering salt in my diet helped a few points, as did taking flax seed oil, losing a few pounds, exercising, getting treatment for my sleep apnea, etc. I guess apnea can be a definite cause or contributor, so I throw that idea out to you in case you suspect you may have sleep apnea. The main symptoms are daytime sleepiness and snoring.

I looked at that resperate link and am intrigued. Wish it wasn't so expensive.
Hi, sunrise! Thanks for your post. I agree that biofeedback is a good option, if you can afford it or your insurance will pay for it. I can't and my insurance won't so it's not an option for me. I don't have sleep apnea and I don't eat much salt. I could use to lose a few pounds and I could exercise a lot more, but I don't know what good it would do me. Right now I'm on four medications and the docs are going to do some serious testing to find out whether there are physical conditions causing this resistant high blood pressure. I'd love to have that resperate gadget but can't afford it. Take care!

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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 11:23 AM
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Does T tell you that protein powders will reduce triglycerides? Take care!
No, he didn't. That was totally my extrapolation. As a second career I became a manicurist, and I tell T my license is better than his because I can buy and dispense chemicals and he can't.

I couldn't tolerate the fish oil caps, prescription or otherwise, so I eat sardines until I get sick of them. I need to regulate everything better!

ps i've been meaning to tell you, I love your name! I always picture my first french teacher, who I adored! (and who adored me!)
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Default Sep 05, 2011 at 12:11 PM
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Originally Posted by Ygrec23 View Post
Which leads me to believe, rather strongly, that there are parts of our minds that can control BP and pulse rate, and the only question is how to harness them to work together with our conscious self all the time.
Actually, I spend a month working consciously with my blood pressure, taking it before, during, after various activities (exercise, going out to eat, after a good meal, just being "out") and was chagrined to find that being "out and about" with other people and/or enjoying a good time or going for a 10 minute walk, all got my blood pressure down but also, just "paying attention" to it/myself like what happened with those old time/motion studies and the "Hawthorne" effect seemed to help over time also.

http://www.horology-stuff.com/more/hawthorne.html

That's why I liked the idea of phone monitoring:

http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/742269

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Default Sep 06, 2011 at 01:09 PM
  #20
Saw the Doc again today. Now blood pressure's okay. Pulse is too low though: 43, 36, that kind of thing. So now I'm wearing a Holter Monitor that I'll turn in tomorrow morning back at the Doc's office. They'll process the readings in the computer chip and decide on the next step. Pacemaker time? Who knows? No big deal, anyway.

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