Hypertension can affect your mind, heart, eyes and more, often without causing any obvious symptoms at all.
High blood pressure, or hypertension, affects more than one billion people worldwide and is a leading cause of heart disease and stroke. For decades, researchers have observed that premenopausal women ...
The conversation around high blood pressure could not be more urgent, especially in the African-American community. According ...
High blood pressure, or hypertension, affects more than one billion people worldwide and is a leading cause of heart disease ...
Women are more likely to have autoimmune conditions like lupus or rheumatoid arthritis, which cause inflammation that can ...
Women before menopause are less likely to experience high blood pressure compared to older men and women. Estrogen plays a ...
Heart disease is on track to tighten its grip on American women. New projections from the American Heart Association warn that over the next 25 years, cardiovascular disease will rise sharply, driven ...
A heart-healthy diet can help lower blood pressure. Breakfast foods that are high in fiber, potassium, and whole grains, and that are free of added salt and sugar, can be a flavorful and healthy start ...
Obesity, diabetes and high blood pressure are fueling increases in cardiovascular disease, even among much younger women, the ...
Women’s heart health is heading toward a crisis, with nearly 60% projected to have cardiovascular disease by 2050.
We're just setting up a generation of people to move through life, having their cardiovascular events earlier and more severe ...