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Attack increases when the pressure rises

 When blood pressure levels are exceeded, the risk of heart attack gradually increases with coronary heart disease. The higher the stress level, the more likely it is to have a heart attack. This information is reported in the 'Framingham Survey' and some other surveys later. This increase in blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart attack, is now well-proven in medical science.



Women suffering from hypertension suffer from a heart attack much higher than men, almost twice as much. A Framingham survey found that men with blood pressure more than 160/90 of the age (50-59 years), were three times more likely to have a heart attack than normal men. In other words, men with normal blood pressure are much less likely to have a high risk of heart attack than men who are hypertensive at that age, only one-third.

As the severity of blood pressure increases, the risk of getting a heart attack increases proportionally. The proportion of heart attacks between two groups of men is 1:7 with systolic blood pressure 120:180. In simple terms, when systolic blood pressure is 180 and seven people suffer from a heart attack because of that blood pressure, only one person will have such a dangerous heart attack among such people with systolic blood pressure 120. With proper treatment to prevent coronary heart disease and heart attack, the importance of keeping that pressure normal is unmeasured by reducing blood pressure.

Increased blood pressure not only increases the risk of narrowing of the artery cavity by lining the walls of the arteries, the rate of coronary artery occlusion is also increased quicker. This is the main cause of the direct correlation of increased heart attack with increased blood pressure. When the blood pressure of miserable animals (dogs, rats, rabbits, etc.) is raised artificially in the laboratory, the aging of those organisms is increasing the severity of arterial narrowing, a group of medical scientists researching on this subject noted.



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