- Oct 14, 2005
- 10,047
- 44
- 91
I'm 39/m and I'm overweight. But I workout every day. I had blood pressure issues when I was younger. They went away when I was skinny and then during Covid I gained weight, and boom, they came back. Was back to averaging 150 or 160/90 before I started taking action again a few months ago.
That being said, I've made some lifestyle changes recently -- very little drinking, no coffee, better sleep, more fiber. I am also on a small dose of an ARB with no side effects, so maybe I'll stay on it forever either way.
Every day when I wake up, move to the couch, and take my BP, it's great. This morning it was 119/78. Yesterday it was 130/80.
My main issue is what my BP is later in the day. Like today, I was out and about in 20 degree weather walking the dog and running errands. I decided to take my BP when I got back inside and it was 147/86. I sat for about 15 minutes and took it again and luckily it was 135/80.
I'm trying to lose weight. I exercise daily. I had a clear Coronary CT scan with contrast and stress EKG from June 2020... while I don't know what those tests actually look at, my "heart walls looked fine and I aced the CT scan". But it's been 2 years so perhaps some things have changed.
Mostly just want to know if numbers like 147/86 are OK in "passing" as long as when you sit for 5 or 10 minutes they come back down.
That being said, I've made some lifestyle changes recently -- very little drinking, no coffee, better sleep, more fiber. I am also on a small dose of an ARB with no side effects, so maybe I'll stay on it forever either way.
Every day when I wake up, move to the couch, and take my BP, it's great. This morning it was 119/78. Yesterday it was 130/80.
My main issue is what my BP is later in the day. Like today, I was out and about in 20 degree weather walking the dog and running errands. I decided to take my BP when I got back inside and it was 147/86. I sat for about 15 minutes and took it again and luckily it was 135/80.
I'm trying to lose weight. I exercise daily. I had a clear Coronary CT scan with contrast and stress EKG from June 2020... while I don't know what those tests actually look at, my "heart walls looked fine and I aced the CT scan". But it's been 2 years so perhaps some things have changed.
Mostly just want to know if numbers like 147/86 are OK in "passing" as long as when you sit for 5 or 10 minutes they come back down.