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Controlling Diabetes and Hypertension

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Since November was National Diabetes Month, we thought we’d highlight another way that diabetes can impact your heart health—hypertension. North Ohio Heart Center and Ohio Medical Group have physicians who specialize in diabetes and hypertension.

Controlling Diabetes and Hypertensions with NOHCAccording to an article in the journal of the American Academy of Family Physicians nearly one in four adults in the United States has hypertension, and more than 10 million adults have diabetes. Moreover, hypertension is twice as common in persons with diabetes as it is in others.

Obesity may be a common link between the two disorders, but other factors such as insulin resistance and autonomic dysfunction may also be involved. Excess weight with truncal obesity, hypertension, impaired glucose tolerance, insulin resistance, and dyslipidemia (a disruption in the amount of lipids in the blood) are among the components of the metabolic syndrome, which has been associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease.

In general, only 25% of patients with hypertension have adequate control of their blood pressure, and this is even more important for those with diabetes. Elevated blood pressure is known to contribute to diabetic microvascular and macrovascular complications such as.

  • Microvascular: kidney disease, sexual dysfunction and eye disease.
  • Macrovascular: cardiac disease and risk of strokes.

Fortunately, reductions in blood pressure can decrease the risk of these complications.

Lifestyle modifications such as exercise and a diet low in salt and high in potassium have clearly been shown to decrease blood pressure and may also improve glycemic control and insulin sensitivity. Excessive sodium intake is particularly harmful in patients with diabetes because it may work against their medications.

Although the benefits of lifestyle modification are clear, few patients are able to achieve blood pressure control with these interventions alone. To reduce this risk, hypertension must be diagnosed accurately and promptly, and the patient must receive adequate treatment. So be sure to see a doctor.


Dr. Navdeep Kaur with Ohio Medical GroupAbout the author:
Practicing in Elyria, Dr. Navdeep Kaur's special interests include Preventive Medicine, Diabetes, Hypertension, Geriatric Medicine. If you don’t currently have a doctor, Ohio Medical Group’s new physician, Dr. Navdeep Kaur, is currently accepting new patients, and Diabetes and Hypertension are two of her specialties!

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