RX-Hypertension Morrisville PA

To control high blood pressure, doctors usually recommend lifestyle changes—exercise, relaxation, and cutting back on salt—plus medication. Soon, daily hibiscus tea may join that line up.

Lee Glickman
(609) 737-5911
2480 Pennington Rd # 101
Pennington, NJ
Specialties
Cardiology
Insurance
Medicare Accepted: No
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Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


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Roy Levinson, MD
(609) 877-0400
218-C Sunset Rd
Willingboro, NJ
Business
Cooper BMA
Specialties
Cardiology

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Jeffrey Litwin
(609) 275-0996
4 Sapphire Drive
Princeton Junction, NJ
Specialties
Cardiology
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Medicare Accepted: No
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Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


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Jonathan Brandt McCabe
(609) 921-7456
281 Witherspoon Street Suite 210
Princeton, NJ
Specialties
Cardiology
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Medicare Accepted: No
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Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


Data Provided by:
Lawrence Jordan
(609) 924-9300
419 N Harrison St
Princeton, NJ
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Cardiology
Insurance
Medicare Accepted: No
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Emergency Care: No


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Abraham George
(609) 695-6363
14 Michael Way
Pennington, NJ
Specialties
Cardiology
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Emergency Care: No


Data Provided by:
Martin Levinson, MD
(609) 871-7070
651 John F Kennedy Way
Willingboro, NJ
Business
Penn Specialty Care of Burlington County
Specialties
Cardiology

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Mark Preminger
(732) 235-6567
4 Snowbird Court
Princeton Junction, NJ
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Cardiology
Insurance
Medicare Accepted: No
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Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


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T Mercuro
(609) 497-4126
3626 US Highway 1
Princeton, NJ
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Cardiology
Insurance
Medicare Accepted: No
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Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


Data Provided by:
John Frederick Hagaman
(609) 921-7456
281 Witherspoon St # 210
Princeton, NJ
Specialties
Cardiology
Insurance
Medicare Accepted: No
Workmens Comp Accepted: No
Accepts Uninsured Patients: No
Emergency Care: No


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RX-Hypertension

Provided by: 

By Jennifer Pirtle

According to the National Heart, Lung and Blood Association, nearly one-third of Americans suffer from hypertension (high blood pressure). Like thin-walled hoses holding too much water pressure, the blood vessels of hyper- tensives become stretched and fragile. The intense pressure can also endanger the other organs and lead to heart and kidney failure, strokes, or blindness.

To control high blood pressure, doctors usually recommend lifestyle changes—exercise, relaxation, and cutting back on salt—plus medication. Soon, daily hibiscus tea may join that line up. It appears to ease mild hypertension the same way many anti-hypertensive drugs do—by opening the blood vessels, decreasing the viscosity of the blood, and increasing urine production (which reduces blood volume).

Hibiscus teas are made from the flowering bush Hibiscus sabdariffa, a relative of the yard-dwelling tropical beauty with the dinner plate-sized flowers. Sometimes called roselle or karkade, the plant grows a thick, juicy calyx (the ring around the base of the blossom) that people the world over use for flavorings, drinks, desserts, and now, hypertension treatment. In a study published in Phytomedicine in 2004, patients drank a daily infusion of 10 grams of the dried calyxes. Study results show the tea controlled mild to moderate hypertension as effectively as captopril, a leading drug for hypertension and heart failure.

It also works quickly. The Journal of Ethnopharmacology reported that after just 12 days, 31 patients drinking hibiscus tea averaged an 11.2 percent drop in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and a 10.7 percent drop in diastolic blood pressure (DSP). (Your heart generates SBP during a beat and DSP between beats.) In hypertensive individuals, SBP tops 140 and DSP 90. Normal blood pressure measures below 120 SBP and 80 DSP, which means hibiscus tea could bring a mild case of hypertension down to near normal in less than two weeks.

How should hypertensives use this wonder beverage? If you currently take blood-pressure medication, Ellen Kamhi, PhD, RN, and coauthor of The Natural Medicine Chest (Evans & Co., 2000), recommends working with an herb-savvy medical professional using conventional diagnostic techniques to make sure your blood pressure stays within acceptable levels as you slowly cut back on one pharmaceutical drug at a time. “Herbs’ benefit-to-risk ratio is much better than pharmaceutical drugs’,” she adds, “so it’s worth your time
to experiment.”

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