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Blood Pressure

It is estimated that 60 million Americans have high blood pressure, and uncontrolled high blood pressure (hypertension) is the leading risk factor for both heart attack and stroke. Women are even more vulnerable to high blood pressure than men. Despite lifestyle modifications and drugs, only about two-thirds of those who know they have high blood pressure have it under control (usually with drugs). These statistics make high blood pressure the number one concern of cardiologists and internists today.

Blood pressure is the result of a complex system that includes not only the heart and blood vessels, but also hormones and protein messengers. As the heart pumps, it sends blood through arteries. Healthy arteries expand under the pressure and contract when the pressure wave passes. However, unhealthy or inelastic arteries cannot expand, which causes higher pressure when the blood pumps.

Receptors in the kidneys keep track of pressure and send hormone signals to the heart to speed up or slow down as needed. Readings consistently above 140/90 are a risk factor for heart attacks.

Alternative Therapies

Conventional medicine tries to control blood pressure with drugs such as ACE inhibitors like Accupril or Vasotec or with diuretics like Lasix or Aldactone. But there are more natural ways to control blood pressure already in the normal range that often eliminate the need for drugs at all. Non-drug therapies include:

  • Eat a modified Mediterranean diet using olive oil instead of other cooking oils, high in fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds and spices, high in fish and low in beef and pork.6
  • Exercise at least 30 minutes per day, 4 days per week.
  • Take a robust multivitamin, such as Maximum Vitality™, containing Coenzyme Q10, magnesium, calcium, potassium, folic acid, and lycopene.
  • Further supplement your mineral intake with a multimineral such as Skeletal Calcium™, containing highly absorbable Calcium and Magnesium.
  • If compensating for blood pressure at the high end of the normal range, take special supplements such as Coenzyme Q10 Q-Gel® and Omega-3 Neptune Fish Oil™.

Research Summary

This table illustrates the results of 41 blood pressure studies.

Supplement Dose Systolic_ Diastolic Parameters Comments
CoQ10 Q-Gel3 60mg/day -25.9mm Hg no change n=90
t=3 months
diagnosis: systolic hypertension, but normal diastolic bp: 55% responders
CoQ10 Q-Gel3 60mg/day no change no change n=90,
t=3 months
45% did not respond to this dose
CoQ102 various -16mm Hg -10mg Hg 8 studies meta analysis
Omega-3 Fish Oil4 5.6g/day mean dose -3.4mm Hg -2.0mm Hg n=1356

31 studies

meta analysis
Lycopene5 15mg/day -10mm Hg -4mm Hg n=31
t=8 weeks
grade I hypertensive patients

 

Calcium Supplementation vs. Salt Elimination

Researchers determined that salt intake only adversely affected blood pressure when a person was deficient in calcium. When calcium intake was adequate, salt had no effect on blood pressure. As calcium intake increased, blood pressure decreased. The researchers concluded that salt sensitive hypertension is more likely to indicate a poor diet (lacking in calcium) than a predisposition to hypertension.1

 

Coenzyme Q10

In a meta-analysis of eight CoQ10 studies published in 2003, the mean decrease in systolic blood pressure was 16 mm Hg and in diastolic blood pressure, 10 mm Hg. Researchers concluded: Being devoid of significant side effects, CoQ10 may have a role as an adjunct or alternative to conventional agents in the treatment of hypertension.2

Coenzyme Q10 Q-Gel

A study evaluated the antihypertensive effectiveness of oral Coenzyme Q10 (hydrosoluble Q-Gel brand) in a cohort of 46 men and 37 women with isolated systolic hypertension. This double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was carried out at the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Boise, Idaho, and was published in the November, 2001 Southern Medical Journal.3

The mean reduction in systolic blood pressure of the Q-Gel-treated group was 17.8 +/- 7.3 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM) at the end of the 3-month trial. None of the patients exhibited orthostatic blood pressure changes.

Further analysis indicated that 55% of patients responded to this dose; 45% did not respond. Within the group of responders, the average drop in systolic blood pressure was 25.9 mm Hg. Since this study was not designed to evaluate dose-related responses, it is possible that a higher dose may have increased the number of responders.

These results suggest hydrosoluble CoQ10 Q-Gel may be safely offered to hypertensive patients as an alternative treatment option.3

 

Omega-3 Fish Oil

Harvard researchers conclude that supplementation with 7.7 to 9 grams/day of fish oils will reduce systolic blood pressure by 4 mm Hg and diastolic pressure by 3 mm Hg in hypertensive individuals. Blood pressure reductions may be substantially larger among patients with atherosclerosis or high cholesterol levels.4

 

Lycopene

Clinical research conducted at Ben-Gurion University, Israel shows that lycopene complex, a tomato extract, reduces blood pressure in patients with mild to moderate hypertension. Lycopene is a powerful antioxidant found in red produce such as tomatoes and tomato products, watermelon, and pink grapefruit.

At the end of the 8-week study period, participants' systolic blood pressure dropped to an average of 134 mm Hg from an average of 144 mm Hg, while diastolic pressure dropped to about 83 mm Hg from an average of about 87 mm Hg. “The results of this study are particularly important because our subjects had previously been unsuccessful at lowering their blood pressure using one or two drug methods,” the lead researcher said.5

Lycopene is included in Maximum Vitality multi.

 

References

  1. McCarron, DA, et. al. Dietary Sodium Effects on Blood Pressure Are Dependent on Mineral Intake: Analysis of NHANES III and IV Data. Presented at the High Blood Pressure Research Council 57th Annual Conference, September 25, 2003, Washington, D.C.
  2. Rosenfeldt F, Hilton D, Pepe S, Krum H. Systematic review of effect of coenzyme Q10 in physical exercise, hypertension and heart failure. Biofactors. 2003;18(1-4):91-100.
  3. Burke BE, Neuenschwander R, Olson RD. Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of coenzyme Q10 in isolated systolic hypertension. South Med J. 2001 Nov;94(11):1112-7.
  4. Morris, Martha Clare, et al. Does fish oil lower blood pressure? A meta-analysis of controlled trials. Circulation, Vol. 88, No. 2, August 1993, pp. 523-33.
  5. Engelhard, Y. N., Gazer, B., Paran, E. Natural antioxidants from tomato extract reduce blood pressure in patients with grade-1 hypertension: A double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot study. American Heart Journal 2006 Jan;151(1):100.
  6. Estruch R. Effects of Mediterranean-Style Diet on Cardiovascular Risk Factors. Ann Intern Med. 2006;145:1-11.