Cardizem (Diltiazem)

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Other names: Diltiazem, Tiazac, Cartia, Dilacor, Diltia
Cardizem (Diltiazem)
HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE AND STRESS: ANSWERS TO SOME IMPORTANT QUESTIONS
We now come to stress. One hears a great deal about stress these days. Does that mean that it is becoming an increasingly severe problem?
Certainly, it is becoming an increasingly noticed problem. Whether or not it is worse now than in times past cannot be decisively determined. Thanks to social security, unemployment insurance, health insurance, retirement plans, trade unions and other features of modern life, we escape much of the stress which plagued our forebears. Think of the severe stress so many Americans underwent during the depression of the 1930s. If the boss looked at you the wrong way, or if any member of your family showed signs of contracting a bad illness, you immediately might start to worry about the possibility of financial destitution.
Happily, such dire situations are, for most of us, things of the past. Less happily, however, the much more comfortable conditions we enjoy today create stress situations of their own. For example, today most people can afford to take vacations. But deciding just where to go, what to do and how much to spend can create all kinds of stress. The same holds true for so many other aspects of modern life. Most of us own many more clothes than our parents possessed. As a result, simply deciding what to wear each day has become, for some people, a stressful situation. In general, the more options one has, the more decisions one has to make, and decision-making can be quite a stressful experience.
How seriously does such stress affect blood pressure?
It would be difficult to overstate its effect. Stress stimulates the adrenal glands which prompt the heart to pump harder. The result is a rapid rise in blood pressure. De Paul University in Illinois checked the blood pressure of 254 students before and during a final exam. Before the exam, their average was 118/58. During the exam, it registered 152/113. This represents a nearly one-third increase in the systolic or top number and an almost 100 per cent increase in the diastolic or bottom number. It vividly indicates what a stressful situation can do to blood pressure. .
In another experiment, the blood pressure of a group of young adults was taken when they were calm and relaxed. Then each was individually told some bad news. The imparting of this information caused their blood pressure to rise were under 40 years old with a similarly aged group of patients who were suffering from other kinds of illness. He found that 91 per cent of the heart patients had undergone prolonged emotional strain associated with problems connected to their work. But in the other group of patients, only 20 per cent had experienced a similar level of stress. His findings led Dr. Russek to put emotional stress above diet, smoking, heredity, obesity and lack of physical activity as a cause of heart trouble.
*39/151/5*

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