Blood Pressure Specialist Casselberry FL

Not so long ago, you either had high blood pressure or you didn’t. Your blood pressure could even flirt with the high normal range without anyone getting overly worked up about it. The same held true for elevated-but'still-normal blood sugar levels.

Arthur Steven Raptoulis, MD
(407) 647-4890
549 Wymore Rd Ste 108
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Suny-Hlth Sci Ctr At Brooklyn, Coll Of Med, Brooklyn Ny 11203
Graduation Year: 1971

Data Provided by:
Janusz B Burzynski, MD
(407) 647-4890
549 Wymore Rd Ste 108
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Akademia Med W Warszawie, Warszawa, Poland
Graduation Year: 1984

Data Provided by:
Gregory Arthur May, MD
(407) 644-4077
870 Cranes Ct
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Miami Sch Of Med, Miami Fl 33101
Graduation Year: 1985

Data Provided by:
Arthur S Raptoulis
(407) 647-4890
557 N Wymore Rd
Maitland, FL
Specialty
Pediatric Cardiology

Data Provided by:
Hani Yanni Seifein, MD
(903) 693-0564
689 E Altamonte Dr
Altamonte Springs, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Ain Shams Univ, Fac Of Med, Abbasia, Cairo, Egypt (330-04 Pr 1/71)
Graduation Year: 1983

Data Provided by:
John C Chow
(407) 831-7818
616 E Altamonte Dr
Altamonte Springs, FL
Specialty
Cardiology, Cardiovascular Disease

Data Provided by:
Harold Louis Greenberg, MD
(407) 645-5504
235 S Maitland Ave Ste 101
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology, Internal Medicine
Gender
Male
Languages
Spanish
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Miami Sch Of Med, Miami Fl 33101
Graduation Year: 1965
Hospital
Hospital: Florida Hosp -Orlando, Orlando, Fl; Florida Hosp-East Orlando, Orlando, Fl; South Seminole Hosp, Longwood, Fl
Group Practice: Harold L Greenberg Pa

Data Provided by:
Raviprasad G Subraya, MD
(407) 645-1847
3102 Legacy Lake Dr
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Internal Medicine, Cardiovascular Diseases
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Mr Med Coll, Gulbarga Univ, Gulbarga, Karnataka, India
Graduation Year: 1982

Data Provided by:
Shailaja Shyam Nadkarni, MD
(407) 647-6454
331 N Maitland Ave Ste C2
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Mgm Med Coll, Devi Ahilya Vishwavidhyalaya, Indore, Mp, India
Graduation Year: 1967

Data Provided by:
Ashraf Ahf El Shalakany, MD
(407) 571-1056
912 Druid Rd
Maitland, FL
Specialties
Cardiology
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Ain Shams Univ, Fac Of Med, Abbasia, Cairo, Egypt (330-04 Pr 1/71)
Graduation Year: 1980

Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:

Blood Pressure Concerns

Provided by: 

By James Keough

Not so long ago, you either had high blood pressure or you didn’t. Your blood pressure could even flirt with the high normal range without anyone getting overly worked up about it. The same held true for elevated-but-still-normal blood sugar levels. But all that changed over a 10-year period as the medical profession established new benchmarks and reclassified the old “normal” as “preconditions.”

For blood pressure, that happened in 2003. The Seventh Report of the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC-7) set guidelines for pre-hypertension by defining normal blood pressure as less than 120/80 and setting the optimal level at 115/75. That same year, the term pre-diabetes gained new meaning and considerable traction when then-Health Secretary Tommy Thompson used it to warn Americans of their high risk of developing diabetes. Ten years earlier a committee hosted by the World Health Organization had established bone mineral density readings as the new measure for osteoporosis and at the same time created a new precursor called osteopenia.

At first blush, the concept of preconditions makes perfect sense. If you have a disease like diabetes, then ipso facto, at some point prior to your diagnosis your blood sugar levels became pre-diabetic—not in the sense of “before” diabetes, but rather as in “leading up to” the disease. And theoretically, once you learned that, you and your doctor could take action to make those levels normal again and thus prevent the onset of the disease. And in an ideal—and perhaps less complicated—world that’s what would happen.

The value of a precondition
When asked about the value of reclassifying “high-normal blood pressure” as pre-hypertension, a doctor joked that previously the only thing his patients heard when he used the old term was “Hi, your blood pressure is normal.” For him—and for a good deal of the medical profession—the new precondition underscores the seriousness of the situation for patients. How bad is it? Studies show that compared to people who have normal blood pressure, those with pre-hypertension (120/80 to 139/89) have three and a half times the risk of heart attack and more than one and a half times the risk of coronary artery disease. Other studies have shown that starting at the new optimal level (115/75), the risk of heart attack doubles with each 20-point increase in systolic blood pressure (the top number) or 10-point increase in diastolic blood pressure (the bottom number). Pre-hypertensives also face a vastly increased risk of developing high blood pressure. The Framingham Heart Study found that within four years of baseline testing, 39 to 53 percent of people with high-normal blood pressure (the top half of the current pre-hypertension range) progressed to stage 1 hypertension.

These are not good odds—and they get worse the older you are when first diagnosed with pre-hypertension and the longer you ...

Author: James Keough

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