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Children can have high blood pressure, too. Here's what to know.
High blood pressure – sometimes referred to as "the silent killer" because it can do serious heart and brain damage before symptoms appear – is common in adults. Among U.S. children and adolescents, up to 5% have high blood pressure – also known as hypertension – and as many as 18% have elevated blood pressure, according to a scientific statement from the American Heart Association published recently in its journal Hypertension.
She boarded a cruise ship. Then she had a stroke.
Shelley Davis packed shorts, bathing suits and sunscreen for a weeklong cruise with her husband, Greg, and their 13- and 15-year-old daughters. The morning before boarding the ship in Port Canaveral, Florida, the family from Mesa, Arizona, soaked up the sunshine and played in an arcade. When it came time to board the bus for the cruise terminal, Shelley had a headache. Once on board the ship, she headed straight to her stateroom for a nap.
People who follow these 8 heart health metrics may live years longer
People who strongly adhere to a set of cardiovascular health metrics may live close to a decade longer than those who don't, new research suggests. The study, published Monday in Circulation, found people with higher scores for cardiovascular health lived up to nine years longer on average than those with the lowest scores. The scores measure adherence to a set of lifestyle behaviors and health factors developed by the American Heart Association known as Life's Essential 8.
To prevent heart disease in women, a 'one-size-fits-all approach' might not work
Health care teams and researchers need to do a better job of incorporating racial, ethnic, socioeconomic and sex-specific factors when evaluating heart disease risk in women, a new report says. A scientific statement from the American Heart Association, published Monday in its journal Circulation, said that although cardiovascular disease is...
Scheduling birth before a mother's due date may prevent preeclampsia
More than half of all preeclampsia cases that occur near the end of pregnancy may be prevented by inducing birth or delivering the baby by cesarean section in the final weeks, new research suggests. The study, which relied on computer modeling to predict risk, was published Monday in the American...
She was 28 and went into cardiac arrest at work. CPR and an AED saved her life.
Heather Baker was 28 and a school administrator in Pecatonica, Illinois, when she walked into a conference room for a meeting. She was chatting and joking with her colleagues when she was hit by a sudden wave of nausea. "The whole room was spinning," she said. She tried to tell...
Weight loss may aid health even if some pounds return
People who lost weight through an intensive behavioral weight loss program saw health benefits, possibly even if they later regained some weight, according to a new analysis of more than 100 studies. Researchers found that compared with those who did not, people who went through an intensive weight loss program...
A decade after her baby's heart surgery, a surgeon fixed the same problem in her heart
Cynthia Felix Jeffers was a baby when her 12-day-old sister died from a congenital heart defect. She was 22 when her brother, a week shy of 20, died from the same condition. Cynthia, meanwhile, grew up in New York City being told there was nothing wrong with her heart. Doctors insisted her shortness of breath was caused by asthma. Even though inhalers provided no relief, tests showed her heart was fine.
What to do when a genetic test result signals possible heart risk
It's getting easier than ever to stumble across single genes linked to potential heart risks, but deciding what to do with such findings requires caution, says a new report aimed at helping health care professionals and their patients navigate the process. The report, published Monday as a scientific statement from...
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Heart and Stroke News: Stories about people, science and health, from American Heart Association News.
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