Saturday, December 13, 2025
ADVT 
Health

New technique can reduce high BP without drugs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Aug, 2014 09:04 AM
    A new technique called mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) can help people suffering from hypertension.
     
    Current high blood pressure treatment guidelines recommend lifestyle changes such as diet, exercise and overall weight loss.
     
    According to researchers, these changes can be dramatically augmented by the MBSR technique.
     
    In a trial including 100 patients between 30-60 years of age who were not taking medications for pre-or hypertension, researchers found that the new technique resulted in substantial and statistically significant reductions in the primary outcomes.
     
    The mindfulness-based stress reduction programme consisted of eight group sessions of 2.5 hours in duration.
     
    It included instruction and practice in mindfulness meditation skills along with discussion of stress, coping and homework assignments designed for patients to document their mood and anxiety levels.
     
    A therapist guided participants through body scan exercise where the participants "inventoried" how they felt in all parts of their body, sitting meditation and yoga.
     
    The trial required participants to practice each for 45 minutes six days a week.
     
    The MBSR resulted a -4.8-mm Hg reduction in systolic blood pressure (SBP) and a 1.9-mm Hg reduction in diastolic blood pressure (DBP), researchers noticed.
     
    "This was one of the first prospective randomised trials of MBSR as a nonpharmocologic treatment option," said Richard Josephson, a professor at Case Western Reserve University's School of Medicine.
     
    More trials can be conducted to further evaluate the effectiveness of MBSR as it could have broad applications for multiple maladies, researchers concluded.
     
    The findings appeared in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood
    Not just moms, a new dad's heart too pours for his or her toddler the moment he looks at him or her playing...

    How new dads' brains react to fatherhood

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Researchers make IVF safer for women
    Researchers could have just made IVF - an assisted fertilisation therapy - treatment safer for women after successfully using a new method to stimulate ovulation...

    Researchers make IVF safer for women

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage
    Omega-3 fish oil could save the brain from alcohol-related damage and dementia by up to 90 percent, a new study says...

    Fish oil may save alcoholics from brain damage

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?
    According to an alarming study by University of Exeter, tiny plastic particles polluting our seas are entering the bodies of marine creatures through their gills....

    Are we gulping down plastic with sea food?

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning
    Cinnamon can not only tickle your taste buds, the ancient cooking spice is also an effective anti-bacterial agent and can help prevent some of the most serious food-borne...

    Cinnamon can prevent food poisoning

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver
    For people suffering from non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, eating probiotics for a month can help diminish the accumulation of fat in the liver...

    Probiotics help reduce fat in liver