Symptom of high blood pressure?
Sometimes I get these tension type headaches. I have medicated hypertension and at home just Bp is pretty good.
At my doctor's office, it was 114/?? 80s I think.
I asked my doctor about my tension headaches and she said it's due to BP which worries me because I can get them for weeks. I'm starting propanol.
But does this mean I have high BP for weeks?
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@ehdog Propanolol seems to be the first thing tried for migraines, even if BP isn't very high. Do yours come around your period?
@sueinmn
I think it's more common around my period as I am having one now and I'm on my period but I can't say it's strictly period related. I don't know I never paid much mind until today
Im on Amlodipine for my hypertension but my doctor said not to worry unless I develop chest pain and vision changesI've had slightly dull chest pain and it landed me in the er once because I thought I was having a heart attack. They told me it was anxiety.and I have a blind spot I notice sometimes but my BP is normally 116/83What's going on?She also said it's okay since I don't have consistent readings of consistently high (over 140/90 on several checks) or severe headachesI asked her about it and I'm waiting for a response
What’s happening is that these symptoms are not coming from high blood pressure. A reading around 116/83 is normal and hypertension causes damage only when blood pressure stays high over time WITHOUT treatment.
The chest pain you are describing fits anxiety, not heart disease or a blood pressure issue. Anxiety related chest pain is dull, tight, or aching, it can linger, it feels very real and frightening, and it does not line up with blood pressure readings.
The blind spot is also not a sign of blood pressure damage. Eye damage from hypertension happens with long term uncontrolled high blood pressure and causes persistent vision loss, not blind spots you only see sometimes. This sounds more like a visual aura, eye strain, or anxiety related visual processing changes.
Your blood pressure is controlled, your symptoms do not match hypertensive complications, and your emergency room evaluation ruled out heart related causes. Changing blood pressure medications would not help anxiety or migraine type symptoms, which is why you do not need an adjustment on your blood pressure medication when the numbers are already good.
Bottom line, you are not damaging your heart or organs. Your blood pressure is doing what it is supposed to do. The symptoms are real but they are not being caused by hypertension. Anxiety can convincingly mimic heart and vision symptoms.
Waiting for your doctor’s/NP's response is reasonable, but based on everything you have shared, there is no sign of missed hypertension danger. Continue taking amlodipine daily, use propranolol as needed, and focus on decompressing.
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Can I ask for more clarification on the vision disturbances that come with hypertension? It wouldn't just be a blind spot, right? Let alone one I don't always notice? Would it be more like losing my entire ability slowly over time with elevated readings? Would infrequent high readings contribute to this? Or only consistent ones?
@ehdog
Vision problems caused by hypertension are not subtle, not intermittent, and not limited to a small blind spot.
Hypertensive eye damage, called hypertensive retinopathy, only develops after long term, consistently uncontrolled blood pressure, typically over years. It results from ongoing damage to the small blood vessels in the retina. In real life, this causes persistent and worsening visual changes, not something you notice occasionally. People develop steadily worsening blurry vision, distortion, and/or larger areas of vision loss. It does not come and go, and it does not present as a small blind spot you sometimes notice and sometimes do not. You would clearly and repeatedly/always notice a problem.
This does not occur with normal or well controlled blood pressure. Infrequent spikes, anxiety related elevations, or isolated high readings do not cause this kind of damage. The risk exists only when blood pressure stays high most or all of the time.
With true hypertensive vision damage, doctors always see clear abnormalities on eye exam before patients notice it. By the time vision is affected, blood pressure has been uncontrolled for a long period and readings are significantly elevated.
So the answer is it would not be just a blind spot, especially not one you occasionally notice. It would be progressive, persistent, and obvious. Infrequent high readings do not cause this. Only consistently elevated, untreated blood pressure over time does.
@ashlynnmae
Hmm. Larger areas? What would that look like? Not that I probably have that. My readings seem okay on both cuffs consistently.
@ehdog
When hypertension affects vision, the loss is not tiny or subtle. “Larger areas” refers to whole sections of vision that are missing or severely blurred. This can look like a dark or gray area covering part or all of your visual field, difficulty seeing out of one side, or vision that appears washed out or distorted across a noticeable region. It interferes with life. You would notice it immediately, without needing to search for it.
This type of vision loss does not fluctuate. If someone has hypertensive eye damage, the problem is present every time they open their eyes. It does not appear and disappear, and it does not depend on focus or attention.
Hypertensive vision damage ONLY occurs with clearly uncontrolled blood pressure, much higher than yours, and over a long period of time.
A small, occasional blind spot that comes and goes is not how hypertensive eye disease presents. That pattern is consistent with migraine aura, visual strain, or anxiety related visual processing changes, especially in someone whose blood pressure is consistently normal on medication.
Since your readings are steady and normal on both cuffs, there is NO mechanism for hypertension to be causing vision problems. Nothing you’ve described matches hypertensive eye damage.
@ashlynnmae
Does it matter that my blind spot or the "crescent" spot in my vision is always there? I just can't always notice it. Only really on plain white surfaces, it is grey/black though and seems to be across a good portion of my vision.
@ehdog
If the spot is always physically present but you only notice it sometimes, such as on plain white surfaces, it is likely related to a migraine aura, visual processing quirk, or eye strain. The important points that show it is not caused by hypertension are:
Hypertensive vision problems do not appear only on certain backgrounds, they are persistent and clearly noticeable across all visual situations. They do not come and go in awareness, the loss is there every time you look, even if your brain partially filters it out. They occur in the context of long term, poorly controlled high blood pressure, which you do not have.
Because your blood pressure is well controlled and your readings are consistently normal, this spot is not caused by hypertension.