If you’ve ever sat in the emergency room with a broken bone or a severe back spasm, you might have noticed the nurse frowning ...
Chronic pain might quietly push people toward developing high blood pressure—and the more widespread the pain, the greater the danger. A massive analysis of over 200,000 adults uncovered strong links ...
Evidence suggests chronic pain can affect the mechanism that regulates blood pressure, causing blood pressure to become too high. High blood pressure, also known as hypertension, is when the pressure ...
Chronic pain in adults may increase their risk of high blood pressure, and the location and extent of pain and if they also had depression were contributing factors, according to new research ...
Chronic pain in adults may increase the risk of high blood pressure, according to a November analysis published in Hypertension. Researchers examined 206,963 UK Biobank participants and measured the ...
Many people assume that high blood pressure must come with obvious signs or discomfort. But in reality, high blood pressure often causes no pain at all—earning it the nickname “the silent killer.” ...