13 Conditions That Can Be Mistaken for Heart Failure



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Childhood Cancer Survivors Face Long-Term Risk Of Kidney Disease, Hypertension

Childhood cancer survivors face heightened risks of chronic kidney disease and hypertension, necessitating urgent updates to monitoring guidelines for their long-term health.

Childhood cancer survivors face a significantly higher risk of developing chronic kidney disease (CKD) and hypertension than their peers, often within the first year after completing cancer therapy, according to a large, population-based cohort study.1

While treatment and survival for childhood cancer have improved, the majority of survivors have chronic health issues before the age of 50.2 The new findings, published in JAMA Network Open, indicate the urgent need for updated, evidence-based international screening guidelines tailored to this vulnerable population.1

Long-Term Follow-Up Reveals Elevated Risk

The retrospective study followed 10,182 childhood cancer survivors for up to 27 years and compared them with 2 matched cohorts: 40,728 hospitalized children and 35,307 children from the general pediatric (GP) population. Over time, childhood cancer survivors were significantly more likely to develop CKD or hypertension, with cumulative incidences reaching 20.85% when compared with 16.47% in the hospitalized group and 8.05% in the GP group.

Adjusted HRs (aHR) revealed that childhood cancer survivors were twice as likely to develop kidney-related complications compared with hospitalized peers (aHR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.86-2.14) and nearly 5 times as likely compared with children from the general population (aHR, 4.71; 95% CI, 4.27-5.19).

"These results strengthen the hypothesis that [childhood cancer survivors] require monitoring for blood pressure and kidney health soon after cancer treatment is complete and ongoing into adulthood," the researchers wrote.

Early Onset, Persistent Risk

Kidney and blood pressure issues emerged as early as the first year after treatment and continued to accrue over time. While the cumulative incidence of CKD was approximately 8% among childhood cancer survivors, the authors speculate that the actual rate may be higher due to limitations of administrative data, which are highly specific but not sensitive for detecting such conditions.

"Early treatment of CKD and hypertension can mitigate disease progression and decrease cardiovascular disease risk," the authors noted. "Our findings support that [childhood cancer survivors] must be considered as a high CVD risk group requiring primary and secondary prevention."

Gaps in Current Guidelines

Despite the elevated risk, many late effects surveillance guidelines for childhood cancer survivors either lack specific recommendations for kidney monitoring or fail to include important indicators such as albuminuria, the study stated. Existing guidelines are often vague, with little consensus on which survivors should be screened, with what tests, how frequently, or for how long.

The authors argue that current efforts to align international guidelines, such as those led by the International Guidelines Harmonization Group, must do more to integrate pediatric hypertension and CKD frameworks into childhood cancer survivor follow-up protocols.

Treatment Exposures and Risk Stratification

Certain cancer therapies are already known to elevate kidney risk. Radiation, stem cell transplants, and nephrotoxic agents like cisplatin have well-documented kidney toxicities. The study's large sample size enabled stratified analyses showing that childhood cancer survivors exposed to these therapies were at even higher risk for CKD or hypertension.

However, some potential contributors, such as anthracyclines, associated with secondary hypertension, or thrombotic microangiopathy, could not be adequately evaluated due to data limitations. Additionally, the inability to assess repeated episodes of acute kidney injury during cancer treatment, a known risk factor for long-term kidney damage, remains a research gap.

Future Research and Policy Implications

While this is the largest study to date examining kidney outcomes in this population, the authors acknowledged its limitations. The use of administrative data restricts precision in identifying CKD stages, severity, or manifestations such as glomerular filtration rate (GFR) declines or proteinuria. Sociodemographic factors like obesity, race, or family history were not fully accounted for, and laboratory values were not included. However, the data offer robust evidence for health policy changes, according to the authors.

While treatment and survival for childhood cancer have improved, the majority of survivors have chronic health issues before the age of 50.

image credit: filins-stock.Adobe.Com

"Future research should refine which [childhood cancer survivors] are at highest risk for kidney outcomes to develop cost-effective screening approaches," the authors concluded. "Collaborative efforts between kidney and cancer stakeholder organizations are crucial to reducing long-term morbidity and mortality."

References

1. Lebel A, Chanchlani R, Cockovski V, et al. Chronic kidney disease or hypertension after childhood cancer. JAMA Netw Open. 2025;8(5):e258199. Doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.8199

2. Erdmann F, Frederiksen LE, Bonaventure A, et al. Childhood cancer: survival, treatment modalities, late effects and improvements over time. Cancer Epidemiol. 2021;71(Pt B):101733.


Is Your Hypertension Putting You Under Pressure?

Understanding hypertension

Also known as high blood pressure, it is a condition where the force of blood pushing against the walls of your arteries is consistently too high. Imagine your heart as a pump and your arteries as pipes. If the pressure inside those pipes becomes too strong over time, it can damage the walls and strain your heart.

Measuring blood pressure

There are two numbers: systolic (when the heart beats) and diastolic (when the heart rests between beats). For example, if your reading is 120/80mmHg, 120 is the systolic and 80 is the diastolic pressure. A normal blood pressure reading is less than 120/80mmHg. When blood pressure remains high for a long time, it increases the risk of problems like heart attack, stroke, kidney disease and vision loss. The danger with hypertension is that it often shows no symptoms, which is why it is commonly called a 'silent killer'.

Understanding the ranges

At stage one, systolic is between 130 and 139, and diastolic between 80 and 89. Stage two is when systolic is 140 or higher, while diastolic is 90 or higher. It is a hypertensive crisis when systolic is over 180 and diastolic is over 120.

How Indians differ from Caucasians

Indians tend to develop heart disease at a younger age and at lower body weights compared with western populations. We also have a higher prevalence of salt sensitivity, central obesity, insulin resistance and early onset of diabetes. All of these make us more vulnerable even at borderline blood pressure readings. Many Indian doctors prefer to intervene earlier, sometimes even during the 'elevated' phase, especially if the person has additional risk factors like family history, diabetes or obesity. This is because studies have shown that cardiovascular events in Indians often occur without warning and at lower blood pressure thresholds.

Do not ignore even slightly elevated readings

Blood pressure above 130/80mmHg should raise concern, especially with other risk factors. Early diagnosis and proactive intervention are critical.

Types

Primary (essential) hypertension: This is the most common and develops gradually. It is usually linked to a combination of genetic and lifestyle factors. Secondary hypertension: Caused by an underlying condition such as kidney disease, thyroid disorders, adrenal gland problems or certain medications (like birth control pills, steroids or overuse of painkillers).

The first type has no identifiable cause. Secondary hypertension often appears suddenly and may be more severe. Diagnosing and treating the root cause of secondary hypertension can sometimes lead to a complete resolution.

Age is a risk factor

Especially for men. Those over 65 or maybe even before that can have it. Hence, frequent check-ups are advised. Women may develop high blood pressure after 65.

Heredity

If your parents or close relatives have high blood pressure, you may have a higher chance of developing it. Inherited traits combined with unhealthy lifestyle habits can trigger it sooner. In India, where family medical histories are often poorly documented, it is even more important to proactively monitor blood pressure.

A weighty issue

Indian diets are often high in salt because of pickles, papads and packaged foods, which increases risk. Fat tissue, especially around the abdomen, produces substances that promote inflammation, insulin resistance and hormonal changes, all of which can elevate blood pressure.

Losing even 5 to 10 per cent of body weight can significantly improve blood pressure control. In some cases, patients who lose significant weight are able to reduce or even stop their blood pressure medications under medical guidance.

Hypertension in children

Though less common, it can occur because of underlying health problems like kidney disease or heart defects. But with increasing obesity and sedentary habits, even healthy children are now showing higher blood pressure levels. Early diagnosis is important.

Sleep is crucial

This is the time the body regulates several processes, including blood pressure. People with sleep apnoea—a condition where breathing repeatedly stops and starts during sleep—experience drops in oxygen levels and repeated awakenings. These disturbances activate the body's stress response, keeping blood pressure elevated even during the night. Over time, this can lead to chronic hypertension. Poor sleep quality, even without apnoea, also increases stress hormone levels, disrupts natural blood pressure rhythms, and might lead to daytime fatigue and weight gain, further worsening blood pressure. Maintaining good sleep hygiene, such as avoiding screens before bed and sticking to a routine, can have a significant positive effect.

The power of small lifestyle changes

Regular physical activity (even 30 minutes of brisk walking daily), mindful eating, stress-relief practices (like meditation or yoga), adequate sleeping and quitting tobacco can significantly reduce blood pressure. Reduced salt intake means less sodium, hence less fluid retention that can raise blood pressure. However, any decision to reduce or stop medication must be made under doctor's assistance. Some patients with more advanced hypertension might still need medication, but even in these cases, lifestyle changes enhance the effectiveness of treatment.

The DASH diet

The Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension diet is a proven eating plan designed to lower blood pressure. It emphasises fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy, lean protein, nuts and seeds. It also limits foods high in salt, sugar and saturated fat. This diet increases your intake of nutrients like potassium, calcium and magnesium, which are minerals that help control blood pressure. This diet can lower blood pressure within a few weeks, especially when combined with regular exercise.

The buzz about alcohol

When you drink alcohol, your heart starts beating faster, and your blood vessels become narrower. This causes your blood pressure to go up. If this happens occasionally, your body may recover, but if you drink regularly, especially in large amounts, it can lead to sustained high blood pressure, also known as hypertension. Alcohol also affects your nervous system and causes the release of hormones like adrenaline, which make the heart work harder and increase blood pressure even more. Over time, this added pressure can strain your heart, arteries, kidneys and brain, increasing the risk of heart attack, stroke and kidney problems.

Drinking alcohol also adds extra calories, which can lead to weight gain. It can interfere with blood pressure medications, making them less effective. People who already have high blood pressure are usually advised to limit alcohol or avoid it entirely.

Low blood pressure

While it is not always harmful, if it drops too low, it can reduce the flow of blood to the brain and other organs, causing symptoms like dizziness, fainting, blurred vision, fatigue and nausea. Drinking more fluids, eating small frequent meals, avoiding sudden position changes and wearing compression stockings may help. In some cases, medication is required.

Symptoms

In rare cases when symptoms do occur, they may include persistent morning headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, nosebleeds, fatigue or confusion—especially when it reaches crisis levels. Such situations demand urgent medical attention.

The illusion of normal

As symptoms are unreliable indicators, regular blood pressure monitoring remains the most effective way to detect and manage hypertension. Most people with high blood pressure will have no noticeable symptoms even if their readings are dangerously high. This asymptomatic nature makes hypertension particularly hazardous because damage to the heart, kidneys, brain and blood vessels can occur quietly over time.

When to start monitoring

Ideally around 18, and earlier if there are risk factors such as obesity, diabetes or family history. For healthy adults, blood pressure should be measured at least once every two years. After 40, or if you are at high risk because of lifestyle or genetic factors, annual monitoring is advisable. People already diagnosed or with related conditions like diabetes or kidney disease should monitor it more frequently, as per their doctor's advice. Regular monitoring at home can also be helpful to track trends and avoid 'white-coat hypertension', where blood pressure rises only in clinical settings.

Diagnosis

Is by use of a blood pressure monitor (sphygmomanometer or digital BP machine). If readings are consistently above 140/90mmHg on different days, a doctor may diagnose it as hypertension. In certain cases, doctors may recommend ambulatory blood pressure monitoring, where a device records your blood pressure over 24 hours during normal daily activities.

At-home monitoring

It helps track how well your treatment is working and detects any sudden changes. For most patients, checking it once in the morning and once in the evening for the first week gives a clear picture. After that, once or twice a week may be sufficient unless your doctor advises more frequent readings. It is important to take the readings at the same time each day, sitting quietly for five minutes beforehand, and using a validated, properly fitting arm-cuff device.

A question of reliability

Home blood pressure monitors are generally reliable if used correctly. Devices with an upper arm cuff are preferred over wrist or finger monitors. Calibration and checking the device against your doctor's readings from time to time ensures accuracy.

The harms of excess sodium

WHO recommends limiting salt intake to less than 5g per day, about one tea spoon. Reading food labels and choosing 'low sodium' or 'no added salt' products can help. Cooking at home with minimal salt and avoiding restaurant food is an effective strategy.

Do we need salt in our food?

In many cases, the natural sodium found in fruits, vegetables, grains and dairy products is sufficient to meet our body's needs. Sodium is essential for fluid balance, nerve function and muscle activity, but only in small amounts.

Is rock salt healthier?

While rock salt may have trace minerals like magnesium and potassium, the difference in health impact is minimal.

Common medications

Doctors have a range of medications to treat high blood pressure, often chosen based on age, other health conditions, and how high the blood pressure is. Common classes include ACE inhibitors (which relax blood vessels), ARBs (which block hormones that raise blood pressure), diuretics (water pills that help the body remove excess sodium and fluid), beta-blockers (which reduce heart rate and output), and calcium channel blockers (which prevent blood vessels from tightening). Medications are often lifelong, but their doses may be adjusted over time based on response and side effects.

Potential side effects

Common issues include frequent urination (from diuretics), dry cough (often from ACE inhibitors), dizziness or light-headedness, fatigue, leg swelling or cold extremities. In rare cases, medications may affect potassium levels, kidney function or cause allergic reactions. The key is to not stop medication suddenly, as this can cause a dangerous spike in blood pressure. If side effects occur, your doctor can switch you to another drug or adjust the dosage.

The slow damage to the heart

Over time, high blood pressure makes the heart work harder than it should. This continuous strain causes the heart muscles, particularly in the left ventricle, to thicken. This is known as left ventricular hypertrophy. While this might initially help the heart pump more forcefully, it eventually reduces efficiency and leads to heart failure. High blood pressure also damages the arteries supplying the heart, accelerating the build-up of plaque (atherosclerosis), which increases the risk of heart attacks, angina and arrhythmias.

Hypertension and kidneys

The kidneys filter waste and excess fluid from the blood, and they need healthy blood vessels to function properly. High blood pressure damages these tiny blood vessels. Over time, this leads to chronic kidney disease. As kidney function declines, fluid and waste accumulate, which in turn can further raise blood pressure, creating a vicious cycle. Many people with uncontrolled hypertension end up needing dialysis or kidney transplants.

The link to the brain

The brain is highly sensitive to changes in blood pressure because it relies on a steady, uninterrupted flow of oxygen-rich blood. When blood pressure is consistently high, it damages arteries in the brain. A blocked artery causes an ischaemic stroke, while a ruptured vessel leads to a haemorrhagic stroke, both of which can be life-threatening. High blood pressure is also linked to vascular dementia, where poor circulation gradually damages the brain's ability to think, remember or reason.

The role of stress

When you're stressed, your body releases hormones like adrenaline and cortisol, which prepare you for a 'fight-or-flight' response. These hormones temporarily increase your heart rate and narrow your blood vessels, resulting in a spike in blood pressure. If stress is constant, these temporary spikes can turn into a long-term issue.

The eyes have it, too

Hypertension can harm the tiny, delicate blood vessels in the retina, leading to a condition called hypertensive retinopathy. This damage might cause symptoms like blurred vision, reduced clarity or, in severe cases, sudden vision loss because of bleeding or fluid leakage in the eye. Long-term high blood pressure can also lead to optic nerve damage and other complications. As these eye changes can occur silently, regular eye exams are essential.

Possible damage to arteries

Arteries become stiffer and narrower, a process called atherosclerosis, which reduces blood flow to critical organs and heightens the risk of heart attack or stroke. Peripheral artery disease occurs when arteries outside the heart, especially in the legs, become narrowed or blocked due to a build-up of plaque. High blood pressure contributes to this process by damaging the inner lining of arteries, making them more susceptible to plaque build-up. This reduces blood flow to the limbs, causing pain, cramps and weakness, particularly during walking or exercise. In severe cases, it can lead to ulcers, infections or even amputation. Managing hypertension is a critical step in preventing or slowing the progression of PAD, alongside controlling cholesterol, blood sugar and quitting tobacco.

Poor sleep quality increases stress hormone levels, disrupts natural blood pressure rhythms, and might lead to daytime fatigue and weight gain, further worsening blood pressure.

A connection to sexual dysfunction

High blood pressure can lead to reduced blood flow to various parts of the body, including the reproductive organs. In men, this often causes erectile dysfunction, as the blood vessels in the penis may not dilate properly to maintain an erection. In women, hypertension may reduce sexual desire and arousal because of decreased blood flow or medication side effects.

Pregnancy induced hypertension

Although blood pressure often returns to normal post-partum, women who experience high blood pressure during pregnancy have a risk of developing chronic hypertension, heart disease and stroke later in life. It is important for these women to have regular follow-ups, maintain a heart-healthy lifestyle and monitor their blood pressure even after pregnancy ends.

Management during pregnancy

This has to be careful as it affects both the mother and the baby. Only certain medications are considered safe during pregnancy. Some severe cases necessitate early delivery. Regular postnatal check-ups help identify if treatment is still needed.

Hypertensive crisis

There are two types: hypertensive urgency and hypertensive emergency. In the first, the blood pressure is very high but without any signs of organ damage. It still needs prompt medical attention, but not necessarily emergency hospitalisation. In contrast, a hypertensive emergency includes symptoms such as chest pain, severe headache, vision changes, confusion, difficulty breathing or signs of stroke. This is life-threatening and requires immediate hospital care. Always monitor for symptoms and don't wait to see if they subside.

The possibility of a reversal

With sustained lifestyle improvements such as weight loss, exercise, dietary changes and stress reduction, many people can achieve normal blood pressure levels. However, for most patients, the goal is to manage and control hypertension effectively rather than cure it.

Yoga and alternative therapies

These and other practices like meditation and deep-breathing exercises have been shown to help lower blood pressure. While not a substitute for medication, these therapies can be powerful complementary strategies.

Challenges in adhering to treatment

These include forgetfulness, side effects from medications, a lack of symptoms, cost of medicines and a poor understanding of the long-term consequences. Cultural beliefs and lack of family support can also play a role. Regular follow-ups, patient education, simple medication schedules and digital reminders can help improve adherence.

Management for the elderly

Requires a balanced approach to prevent complications like dizziness, falls or kidney dysfunction. Blood pressure targets may be adjusted based on overall health and other existing conditions. Doctors often start with lower doses of medication and increase gradually. It is also essential to monitor kidney function and watch for side effects. Lifestyle changes and proper hydration are equally important.

Misconceptions

The major one is that high blood pressure always causes symptoms. Another is the belief that once it is controlled, medication can be stopped. Many also assume that only older people get hypertension or that it's solely caused by stress.

Quick advice

Don't panic. Understand that it is a long-term condition and needs continuous attention. Start by making small but steady changes. Knowledge, consistency and a positive mindset can go a long way in ensuring a healthy life.


Hypertension And Cardiovascular Disease: Silent Killers In Our Midst

When we talk about cardiovascular diseases, we refer to diseases of the heart and the blood vessels. While we know that the heart is a vital organ that pumps blood to the entire body, we should understand a few facts about blood vessels.  

Blood vessels circulate oxygen, nutrients, hormones, and much more, and maintain the body's homeostasis, that is, a stable internal environment despite changes in the external environment. The collective length of the entire vasculature, including arteries, veins, and capillaries, is approximately 96,000 kilometres in a human adult! The thin inner lining of the blood vessels, called the endothelium, is an important endocrine organ regulating the body's metabolism, immune response, inflammation, coagulation, and blood flow. By caring for the health of our blood vessels we are indirectly caring for all our organs and our overall health. 

The term blood pressure, or BP, refers to the force of blood flow in our arteries, produced by the pumping action of the heart. Normal BP is less than 120/80 mmHg in healthy adults; values above this are classified as elevated, hypertension stages 1 and 2, and a hypertensive crisis based on the level of deviation from normal. Both BP and heart rate are vital parameters that help us understand the cardiovascular health of a person. More so, how one's BP and heart rate respond to exercise is an important indicator of a person's exercise capacity and fitness level. 

The 'deadly triad' 

Hypertension or elevated blood pressure is one of three silent killers ravaging the health and well-being of people today. Together with diabetes and cholesterol imbalance, hypertension forms the 'deadly triad' that creeps up on us without any symptoms to cause a myriad of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) such as heart attacks, heart failures, strokes, and sudden cardiac deaths, as well as other organ damage such as kidney failure, liver dysfunction, loss of vision and dementia. Heart attacks and strokes are amongst the major noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) causing premature deaths in the current era. When the health of our blood vessels is compromised, they become a nidus for plaque build-up or atherosclerosis, ultimately causing coronary artery disease and heart attacks or cerebral artery disease and strokes. There are nine modifiable risk factors for heart attack as shown in Figure 1. 

Figure 1. Risk factors for coronary artery disease 

Hypertension poses an enormous burden to the health economy of our country as almost one in four men and over one in five women are hypertensive. Recent research has shown that a very high proportion of patients (around 53%) are unaware that they have high BP. On the other hand, the number of hypertensive patients who have their BP under control is abysmally low, around 20%. Rural India is unfortunately fast catching up with urban India in the high prevalence of all NCDs including hypertension. The loss of productive life-years due to hypertension, and the cost of hospitalisation and treatment of CVD and other NCDs is so high that the only way out of this vicious cycle is to improve awareness about hypertension and empower people with simple and cost-effective strategies to prevent it. 

Causes and prevention strategies 

The story of how hypertension develops is long and complex, the main characters being too much salt in our diet, inadequate fruits and vegetables, excessive saturated fats and trans-fat, lack of exercise, abnormal body weight, poorly managed stress, lack of sleep, tobacco use, and alcohol consumption. Genetic factors, environmental pollution, ethnicity and age act as supporting characters in the hypertension plot. The moral of the story is simple: the lifestyle choices we make on a daily basis are the biggest contributors to the development of hypertension. 

The key steps to curbing the growing incidence of hypertension are: 

  • Making healthy lifestyle choices daily 
  • Resetting unhealthy behaviours/other risk factors on a weekly basis 
  • Getting BP checked monthly (in hypertensive individuals) or yearly (in normotensive individuals)
  • Getting a cardiovascular assessment regularly as advised 
  • Following a comprehensive lifestyle modification programme (for at-risk individuals) or a cardiac rehabilitation programme (for heart patients) 
  • What this means is that all individuals should have their first health-related lifestyle assessment along with BP, blood sugar (BS) and lipids checked at the age of 20 and thereafter every five years, moving to annual checks from the age of 40 onwards.

    Figure 2 outlines the population-level approach for hypertension prevention through lifestyle changes and medical examination. 

    Figure 2. Population-level approach to prevent hypertension

    Lifestyle mantras to prevent hypertension 

    What to eat? At least five portions of vegetables and fruits, at least 1-2 portions of whole grain dishes, adequate proteins and limited healthy fats daily; limiting salt while cooking at home and avoiding packaged/ready foods; the healthy eating plate concept should be followed for every meal.  

    How to prepare the meal and eat it: Prepare meals at home as much as possible, eat food mindfully, slowly and enjoy every bite, and have at least one meal a day with family members/ friends. Eat when hungry or work up an appetite before sitting for a meal, and finish eating at least 2-3 hours before bedtime. 

    Is exercise a must? Regular exercise, at least five days a week, is a must for all, irrespective of whether you are physically active throughout the day or not. At least 30 minutes of brisk aerobic exercise five days of the week (total of 150 minutes) and strength training two days of the week are mandatory for all; intersperse every 30 minutes of a sedentary period with five to 10 minutes of activities such as stretching, brisk walking, stair climbing or workstation exercises; remember, "sitting is the new smoking". 

    What type of exercise is needed? A combination of aerobic exercises (brisk walking, cycling, swimming, jogging, dancing), strengthening exercises (using equipment or weights), flexibility exercises (yoga, tai chi), and balance exercises should be followed by all. 

    How to manage stress? Stress management techniques such as meditation, deep breathing, regular exercise, and active hobbies (dancing, gardening, sports, creative arts) should be practised on a daily basis to keep stress at bay. 

    Is sleep a risk factor? Lack of sufficient and good quality sleep can cause hypertension; aim for 7 to 9 hours of undisturbed sleep daily. 

    Is tobacco harmful? Tobacco use in any form (even passive smoking) is an important risk factor for hypertension, heart disease and stroke; quitting tobacco completely is the best gift of health to oneself; professional help may be sought to quit tobacco use. 

    Is alcohol good or bad for the heart? Alcohol in any form is harmful to the body; excessive/binge alcohol consumption can lead to hypertension and other ailments and should be avoided. 

    Early detection of hypertension 

    Effective population screening programmes are the ideal way to identify hypertension early. As the age cut-off for initial CVD screening is 20 years, basic health screening with BP measurement should become mandatory in all higher educational institutions as well as a criterion that employers must implement. Individuals who do not fall under either the formal education system or employment channels should be screened by innovative strategies such as while appearing for their driving licence or voter ID issuance. 

    As a single reading of high BP is not sufficient to diagnose hypertension, those with an elevated BP should be referred to a physician for a further physical examination and structured BP evaluation. It is important to rule out medical causes of hypertension such as kidney disease, endocrine abnormalities, arterial disorders and sleep apnoea before arriving at a diagnosis of primary or essential hypertension. 

    Adequate control of hypertension 

    Once someone is diagnosed with mild to moderate hypertension, a personalised approach to modify the causative lifestyle habits should be tried first. A comprehensive CVD prevention programme provided by a multidisciplinary team of healthcare professionals and comprising education, exercise, nutritional and psychosocial interventions has been proven to reverse elevated BP in a vast majority of newly diagnosed hypertensive patients. A close watch on the BP trajectory and close supervision of the adherence to lifestyle changes are mandatory during this three to six-month intensive lifestyle modification phase. 

    A poor response to the above step or a very high BP at initial diagnosis should prompt the initiation of BP-lowering medications, choosing either one drug or combination therapy, taking into consideration the individual's clinical and sociodemographic background. The crucial thing in pharmacotherapy is once again frequent BP checks and fine-tuning of the type and dosage of the drug(s) to achieve target BP with as few side effects as possible. 

    Non-compliance to drug therapy being the commonest cause of poor BP control, medication education is key to ensuring adherence to the prescription. Both the physician and the patient should take joint responsibility in achieving the target BP through a health plan that is drafted for the patient and by the patient, with the physician's expert help. 

    Figure 3. Components of a multidisciplinary prevention programme 

    Preventing organ damage 

    As hypertension, just like diabetes and cholesterol imbalance, is known to cause multi-organ damage, constant surveillance for heart disease, impaired kidney function, vision abnormalities, fertility issues, and lung disease is a must. Early detection of signs of organ damage will enable referral to specialist care and escalation of medical management to stall the damage and potentially reverse it. Just like a multidisciplinary prevention programme helps reverse hypertension, a comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation programme is key to addressing the multipronged needs of individuals with heart disease and reversing their disease process. 

    For a preventive cardiologist, the biggest medical challenge today is managing individuals with multimorbidity, a combination of conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, cholesterol abnormalities, obesity, chronic lung disease, fatty liver, impaired renal function, poor mental health, and heart ailments. Elderly patients with frailty, musculoskeletal issues, and weakened immune systems are even more difficult to treat when they have multi-organ damage. 

    While medical and surgical therapy should be deployed as and when deemed necessary, in addition to medication, reinforcing the building blocks of a healthy lifestyle will help improve functional status, quality of life, and resilience to infections at any stage in the disease spectrum. 

    The way forward 

    A close collaboration amongst all stakeholders, namely the public, healthcare professionals, and policymakers, is important, moving forward, to halt the hypertension epidemic before it becomes an untameable beast. Epidemiological, basic scientific and clinical research should progress hand in hand to help us unravel some of the persisting dilemmas and challenges in the domain of hypertension, CVD and NCDs. In this era of superpowers, each one of us should recognise the superpower within us, our mind, that is capable of adopting health-promoting habits and adapting to the changing environment to protect our health and well-being. The collective power of our minds in changing the course of deadly diseases should also be harnessed through education, awareness and adherence. 

    Myths around hypertension 

    Myth 1: I am feeling fine and hence do not see the need for a BP check. 

    High BP usually does not cause any symptoms. In other words, individuals who are feeling fine can still have hypertension and should get their BP checked. 

    Myth 2: Hypertension is in my family and genes and there is nothing I can do to prevent it. 

    While genetic factors play a role in the causation of hypertension, there is scientific evidence to show that healthy lifestyle choices can overrule genetic predispositions and protect us from the disease. 

    Myth 3: Once diagnosed, hypertension is a lifelong disease. 

    Early diagnosis can help reverse hypertension through lifestyle changes and prevent end organ damage. 

    Myth 4: If my BP comes down with medicines, I can stop taking the pills. 

    BP medications should not be modified or stopped without the advice of your physician. 

    Myth 5: I don't have to watch my diet or exercise when I am on BP medication. 

    It is extremely important to lead a healthy lifestyle even while on BP medications, as otherwise your hypertension will worsen, become resistant to treatment and lead to end organ damage within a short time. 

    (Dr. Priya Chockalingam is the clinical director, Cardiac Wellness Institute, Chennai.) 

    Published - May 28, 2025 04:30 pm IST






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