Blood pressure is the force of the blood on the artery walls
as the heart pumps blood through the body. The arteries are
the blood vessels that carry blood from the heart to the
rest of the body.
The heart pumps blood through the blood vessels by
contracting. Each time the heart contracts, the blood
pushes harder against the walls of the arteries than it does
when it rests between beats. This means that the pressure
of the blood on the artery walls is greatest each time the
heart contracts. This is the systolic pressure, the higher
(upper) number in a blood pressure reading.
When the heart rests between beats, the pressure of
blood on artery walls is lower. This is the diastolic
pressure, the lower number in a blood pressure reading.
These 2 levels of blood pressure--systolic and
diastolic--are measured when someone takes your blood pressure. For
example, in the blood pressure reading of 120/80, 120 is the
systolic pressure (the pumping pressure) and 80 is the
diastolic pressure (the resting pressure). The pressures
are measured in millimeters of mercury.
Normal, healthy blood pressure is less than 120/80 ("120
over 80"). The upper number (120) is the pressure when the
heart pushes blood out to the rest of the body (systolic
pressure). The bottom number (80) is the pressure when the
heart rests between beats (diastolic pressure).
Blood pressure can rise and fall with exercise, rest,
emotions, or pain. However, if you have several
measurements over 120/80, you probably have pre-high or high
blood pressure.
- Pre-high blood pressure (prehypertension) is between
120/80 and 139/89.
- Stage I high blood pressure ranges from 140/90 to 159/99.
- Stage II high blood pressure is over 160/100.
The higher your blood pressure, the greater your risk of
having a stroke and other serious medical problems.
You can do the following things to help keep your blood
pressure under control:
If your blood pressure is normal, check it once a year. If
it's above normal, follow the schedule for checkups
recommended by your healthcare provider.
Developed by Phyllis G. Cooper, RN, MN, and McKesson Corporation
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2007 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.