✓ Accepted Answer
High blood pressure (hypertension) often has no symptoms, which is why it's called the silent killer. Warning signs that may indicate dangerously high pressure include severe headache, nosebleeds, visual changes, chest pain, and shortness of breath. If you experience these, seek medical attention promptly.
Lifestyle interventions that genuinely lower blood pressure: reduce sodium intake (under 2,300mg daily), the DASH diet (high in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat dairy), regular aerobic exercise (150 minutes moderate per week), maintaining healthy weight, limiting alcohol, and stopping smoking.
For practical sodium reduction: cook at home instead of eating processed or restaurant food. Read labels — bread, sauces, and ready meals contain surprisingly high sodium. Use herbs and spices instead of salt.
Monitor at home with a validated blood pressure monitor. Take readings at the same time daily, after sitting quietly for 5 minutes. Keep a log to share with your doctor. A single high reading doesn't diagnose hypertension — it's patterns over time.
by ayeshafarooq93857
If you're experiencing fatigue, it's worth getting a blood test before assuming lifestyle causes. Common deficiencies that cause tiredness include iron (especially in women), vitamin B12, vitamin D, and thyroid issues.
For vitamin D specifically: most people in the northern hemisphere are deficient, especially in winter. Symptoms include fatigue, low mood, muscle weakness, and frequent illness. A blood test will confirm. Supplements are cheap — most doctors recommend 1000-2000 IU daily as maintenance.
Iron deficiency anaemia is also very common, especially if your diet is low in red meat. You might feel exhausted, look pale, get short of breath easily, and have cold hands. Ferrous sulphate tablets are the standard treatment — take with vitamin C to improve absorption.
B12 deficiency is common in vegans and vegetarians since it's mainly in animal products. Symptoms include extreme fatigue, brain fog, tingling in hands and feet. B12 supplements or injections resolve it.
See your GP first — a simple blood test rules out or confirms these quickly.
by mariamhassan86759
· 1 upvotes