Natural blood pressure fix: Beet juice

Written by Dr. Victor Marchione
Published on

health-benefits-of-beet-root-juiceHigh blood pressure can take a serious toll on your overall health. Getting your numbers down to normal is crucial for a healthy heart and to avoid the onset of heart-related diseases.

But if you’re a bit wary of taking prescription drugs to lower your blood pressure, there may be a natural fix which research has shown to be quite effective.

Drink up for your blood pressure

In fact, heart healthy food, like one glass of beetroot juice each day, is enough to lower high blood pressure – or hypertension – in patients. That’s according to researchers at London’s Queen Mary University, who recently conducted a placebo-controlled trial involving dozens of patients and beetroot juice. The juice of the vibrant red root vegetable contains high levels of what’s called inorganic nitrate.

In our bodies, inorganic nitrate changes into nitric oxide, which relaxes and dilates blood vessels. Other leafy vegetables, like lettuce and cabbage, also have high levels of the compound, which they take up from the soil through their roots.

Bringing your blood pressure down naturally

The study, published in the journal Hypertension and funded by the British Heart Foundation, also found that a daily glass of beetroot juice can lower blood pressure in people whose high blood pressure was not controlled by drug treatment.

This was the very first study to reveal the long-lasting reduction in blood pressure because of dietary nitrate supplementation in a group of patients with high blood pressure.

In fact, the patients in the active supplement group also experienced an improvement in their blood vessel dilation capacity – roughly 20 percent – and saw their artery stiffness reduced by around 10 percent. And studies show that such changes are connected to a reduced risk of heart disease.

So what does all of this mean? Well, these findings suggest that there’s a role for dietary nitrate – or heart healthy food – in the treatment of patients with high blood pressure. It’s something patients can easily work into their daily lives and reap the benefits.

High blood pressure by the numbers

Generally, high blood pressure increases the risk of more dangerous health conditions. For instance, an estimated 70 percent of people who have their first heart attack, roughly 80 percent of those who have a first stroke, and about 70 percent of those with chronic heart failure, all have high blood pressure.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), high blood pressure is either the primary cause of or at least contributes to 1,000 American deaths every single day.

New hypertension guidelines could save your life

Last year, researchers selected by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute released new and simplified guidelines for the treatment of high blood pressure. The complete implementation of these guidelines could prevent 56,000 cardiovascular disease events, mostly heart attacks and strokes, and 13,000 deaths every year. That’s without increasing overall health care costs, according to research by Columbia University Medical Center and published in the online edition of the New England Journal of Medicine.

Thanks to this most recent study of high blood pressure and heart healthy food, there’s little doubt that the treatment of hypertension can improve even more.

One tip: If you’re looking to increase your daily nitrate intake, be sure not to boil heart healthy foods like vegetables because the nitrate dissolves in water. Instead, try steaming, roasting or drinking something like beet juice. It’ll have the same positive effect.

 

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On any matter relating to your health or well-being, please check with an appropriate health professional. No statement herein is to be construed as a diagnosis, treatment, preventative, or cure for any disease, disorder or abnormal physical state. The statements herein have not been evaluated by the Foods and Drugs Administration or Health Canada. Dr. Marchione and the doctors on the Bel Marra Health Editorial Team are compensated by Bel Marra Health for their work in creating content, consulting along with formulating and endorsing products.

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