Over 60? This Hidden Blood Pressure Reading Most Older Adults Miss is IMPORTANT!
Автор: Ben Harris Seniors Care
Загружено: 2026-02-07
Просмотров: 68
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Most older adults obsess over the usual “top and bottom” numbers but completely miss a third reading that can quietly predict falls, strokes, and even dementia: your standing blood pressure and how much it changes when you go from lying or sitting to standing.
In this video, you’ll learn why this hidden reading is so important after 60, and how to check it safely at home.
The Hidden Reading: Standing (Orthostatic) Blood Pressure
This reading looks at how your blood pressure changes when you stand up.
Two dangerous patterns matter after 60:
A big drop when you stand (orthostatic hypotension)
A big jump when you stand (orthostatic hypertension)
Both are strongly linked to higher risk of falls, fractures, and cardiovascular events in older adults.
1. The Dangerous Drop: Orthostatic Hypotension
Orthostatic hypotension is defined as:
A drop in systolic BP of ≥20 mmHg, or
A drop in diastolic BP of ≥10 mmHg
within 1–3 minutes of standing.
Studies in older adults show:
A significant BP drop after standing is associated with poor standing balance and more reported falls.
Geriatric guidelines now treat lying-and-standing BP as a fundamental part of falls assessment in seniors.
This means your BP can look “perfect” sitting down, yet drop to dangerously low levels when you stand, starving your brain of blood and making you dizzy or unsteady.
2. The Hidden Spike: Standing Hypertension
Newer research shows the opposite problem is also dangerous:
Some people’s systolic BP rises more than about 6–7 mmHg when they stand.
A large rise in standing systolic BP (“hyperreactivity”) nearly doubles major cardiovascular events over long-term follow-up compared with normal responses.
Standing readings:
Can be more accurate than seated readings for detecting true hypertension in adults.
Improve the accuracy of diagnosis when combined with seated BP rather than using seated alone.
3. Why Seniors Can’t Ignore This
With aging, blood pressure regulation becomes less efficient:
Arteries stiffen, baroreflexes (pressure sensors) become sluggish, and medications (for BP, prostate, depression, Parkinson’s, etc.) can blunt the body’s ability to keep BP stable when you stand.
Studies show BP drops after standing are directly linked to impaired balance and increased fall risk in community-dwelling older adults.
So the hidden reading that matters is not just “What is your BP sitting?” but:
“What happens to your BP when you stand up?”
How to Check This Reading at Home
You can do a simple version of the clinical test:
Rest sitting or lying quietly for 5 minutes.
Measure and record your BP.
Stand up (use support if needed).
After 1 minute standing, measure again.
If safe, repeat at 3 minutes standing.
Red flags to discuss with your doctor:
Drop of ≥20 systolic or ≥10 diastolic, especially with dizziness, blurred vision, or feeling faint.
Rise of more than about 6–10 systolic when standing, especially if your overall BP is already in the high range.
Why Your Doctor Should Be Doing This
Geriatric and hypertension experts now emphasize:
Lying-and-standing BP is a cost‑effective way to identify seniors at risk of falls and fractures and to prompt review of medications that may be over‑lowering BP when upright.
Standing BP, alone or combined with seated BP, improves hypertension detection and adds valuable prognostic information about future cardiovascular risk.
If your BP has only ever been checked sitting down, you’re missing a crucial part of the story.
Medical Disclaimer: The content in this video is for educational purposes only and is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your blood pressure, dizziness, or falls. Do not start, stop, or change blood pressure medications based on home standing measurements alone. Any concerns about orthostatic drops or standing BP spikes should be evaluated and managed by your healthcare provider, who can interpret these findings in the context of your overall health, medications, and cardiovascular risk.
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