Staying within a healthy blood pressure range is always advised but how exactly do we know how to stay in this healthy range? How can we control the rate at which blood moves through our bodies? Anyone who has experienced vascular pressure issues whether of low or high blood pressure must have received some form of advice from their doctors. Doctors may recommend a change in diet, lifestyle and a whole lot more. Food recommendations are usually much more common because food tends to impact greatly on vscular apressure in a lot of ways which have been explained through science.
Certain foods are great for regulating your blood pressure and there are other foods that should be completely avoided on the other hand. Foods which you will eat will also affect your vascular pressure in various ways depending on whether you’ve got high or low vascular pressure and the exact cause of your pressure problems. It is important to take note of these foods so that you can learn how to better your lifestyle and protect yourself from falling victim to the adverse effects of high vascular pressure medically and otherwise.
For example, the following foods are good for improving your hypertension:
Fresh fruits Vegetables Milk and low sodium cheeses Whole grain breads Fresh or frozen lean meats Fish Poultry (low sodium) High potassium foods
It is good to make sure that you stick exclusively to balanced diets and remember that these foods will help you promote healthy arteries and a healthy heart which keeps your blood pumping as it should be.
The following foods are bad for hypertension:
Sodium/salt Caffeine Alcohol High saturated fat
We’ve all heard the saying “you are what you eat” and it has a very literal meaning with things such as hypertension. What we put into our bodies has a direct impact on how our bodies react and respond to that food. Everything that we eat gets broken down into the various nutrients and chemicals that make up that food. This gets distributed throughout our bodies and this is how they affect our blood.
Certain foods block the arteries and they make it difficult for blood to pump through. Other foods may increase the heart rate and push it to exceedingly high levels which may be detrimental for someone who has already been previously diagnosed with high vascular pressure. However such foods may be good for a person who has been diagnosed as having low vascular pressure because it raises that person’s blood pressure to more acceptable levels.
You may not have problems with your high blood pressure at the moment but it is still essential to learn about the way food tends to affect your vascular pressure so that you can eat a healthy diet which will make sure that you remain within a healthy vascular range. Eating a healthy, balanced diet and staying within a healthy weight range are all great ways of keeping your blood pressure normal .
Guy Starbuck is a Super Geek and Health Phreak who writes for VascularPressure.com, and DiabetesContent.com.