The right
timing can help you prevent a big — and possibly fatal — mistake.
Chris Kissell • March 4, 2020
Waking up in the morning
and taking your blood pressure medication might be a big — and possibly fatal —
mistake.
Switching to taking blood
pressure pills in the evening can substantially lower your risk of heart-related
disease and death, according to a study published recently in the European Heart
Journal.
The study focusing on
more than 19,000 adults with hypertension found that those who took their blood
pressure pills before bed reduced their risk of heart attack, stroke or other
cardiovascular event by nearly half compared with patients who took their pills
in the morning.
The startling conclusion
should change how you take blood pressure medications, says Dr. John Osborne, a
cardiologist and a volunteer expert for the American Heart Association.
The Dallas-based
physician — who was not associated with the study — told AARP:
“It’s a no-cost,
zero-risk, zero-side-effect intervention that could be done tomorrow in every
clinic. Just changing to evening dosing could translate to substantial reductions
across the whole realm of cardiovascular events.”
Why does a nighttime
medication regimen pay such dividends?
Osborne says blood
pressure typically drops lower at night, before rising in the morning. It tends
to start dipping again in the afternoon.
Taking your blood
pressure medication before bedtime allows it to reach a peak concentration the
next morning — at the same time your blood pressure naturally is at its
highest.
Thus, taking your pills
at night allows the medication to work at highest efficiency just when you need
it most.
The researchers’
findings, which were based on monitoring patients over an average of more than
six years, did not convince everyone.
Dr. Allen Taylor,
chairman of the department of cardiology at MedStar Heart and Vascular Institute
and professor of medicine at Georgetown University Medical Center, tells AARP
he would like to see confirmation of the findings.
However, he also says he
“certainly wouldn’t hesitate” to switch patients to a nighttime medication
routine if such a schedule is convenient for those patients.
Think your blood pressure
readings are nothing to worry about? You might want to reconsider. For more,
check out “Is Your Blood
Pressure ‘Mildly’ High? Here’s Why You Should Worry.”
Will you change the time
of day you take your blood pressure pills? Let us know in comments below or
on our Facebook
page.
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