What Happens
Blood pressure commonly rises as you get older, but this normal
increase occurs more quickly in people who already have high blood
pressure.
Untreated
high blood pressure can damage the delicate lining of
the blood vessels. After a blood vessel is damaged, fat and calcium can easily
build up along the artery wall, forming a
plaque. The blood vessel becomes narrowed and stiff
(atherosclerosis), and blood flow through the blood
vessel is reduced. See a picture of
how high
blood pressure damages arteries
.
Over time, decreased blood flow to certain organs in the body can
cause damage, leading to:
People with borderline, or "high-normal," blood pressure
(120–139/80–89)—which is now considered "prehypertensive"—have a higher risk
for developing high blood pressure and heart disease than those with blood
pressure less than 120/80 millimeters of mercury (mm Hg).4
In addition, men who have high
systolic blood pressure during middle age (50s to 60s)
may show a greater decline in mental ability later in life (after age 75) than
men who do not have high blood pressure earlier. Short-term memory and
attention span are most affected.
Elevated blood pressure readings may not always mean you have high
blood pressure. For some people, just being in a medical setting causes their
blood pressure to rise. This is called
white-coat hypertension.
Malignant hypertension (hypertensive
crisis) is high blood pressure that increases rapidly. The cause may be
unknown, or it may be caused by a medicine or another condition.
Isolated systolic high blood pressure is when systolic blood
pressure is elevated above 140 mm Hg, but
diastolic blood pressure stays at less than 90 mm Hg.
This type of high blood pressure is more common in older adults, especially
older women. If you are older than 50, a systolic blood pressure over 140 is a
more important risk factor for heart disease and stroke than your diastolic
blood pressure.1