shutterstock
Background information

High blood pressure: an invisible danger (especially for women)

Moritz Weinstock
13.3.2024
Translation: machine translated

Do you know your blood pressure? Women should be wary of values above 120 over 80. A doctor and expert in gender-appropriate medicine explains why this is the case.

**The WHO warns that high blood pressure is a "silent killer". At what levels does it become critical? **

Assuming there is a disease. What should you do first?

**You mentioned standard and limit values for high blood pressure. Are these values the same for men and women? **

So women with hypertension need to be medicated sooner and differently?

**Does research know where these differences come from? **

Hypertension often goes undetected because it is asymptomatic at the beginning. Later on, it can lead to symptoms such as dizziness, headaches or sleep disorders. Are there also gender-specific differences in the symptoms?

You have mentioned some of the main symptoms, but here too it is important to emphasise the difference between the sexes. This is because women often do not categorise these often uncharacteristic, chameleon-like symptoms correctly - and ignore them or play them down.

Other symptoms include, for example, general nervousness, agitation and reduced resilience. These are all symptoms that do not necessarily indicate high blood pressure. The basic rule is therefore: if you suddenly have symptoms that you did not have before, you should not take them lightly. The aim is to recognise and treat high blood pressure at an early stage in order to prevent or delay more complex damage.

By the way: cardiovascular and vascular diseases can also trigger vascular dementia. There are forms of dementia that are caused by calcified, constricted or rigid blood vessels, which is often due to high blood pressure that has been inadequately treated over many years.

What medication is used to treat high blood pressure?

A total of seven or eight medications are available, which can also be combined with each other in cases of severe high blood pressure. Initially, drug therapy starts with one, usually two medications. The approach should always be individualised.

What must medicine pay particular attention to when treating women and men?

**Are these the results of the so-called gender data gap, i.e. the fact that a lot of research has been done on men and not on women? Is there already a general rethink towards gender-equitable medicine? **

With what consequences?

Header image: shutterstock

21 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

Notebook, camera, laptop or smartphone. For me, life's about taking notes – both analogue and digital. What's always on me? My iPod Shuffle. It's all in the mix, after all. This is also reflected in the topics I write about.


Health
Follow topics and stay updated on your areas of interest

Background information

Interesting facts about products, behind-the-scenes looks at manufacturers and deep-dives on interesting people.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Background information

    Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS): the most common hormone disorder in women

    by Olivia Leimpeters-Leth

  • Background information

    «We need to learn that medicine isn’t one-size-fits-all»

    by Janina Lebiszczak

  • Background information

    Hey men, the pelvic floor is not just a woman's thing!

    by Ann-Kathrin Schäfer