DCarr10760
New member
That was pretty much what my Doctor told me on Thursday.
I went to my new Doctor (my old Doc retired and I didn't get a new one for a couple of years). A couple of weeks ago I went for my first visit and my blood pressure was high (160/95) this is not really that bad because I have white coat syndrome and my BP gets all spastic when I am in a Doctors office. It has been this way since I was 14. My bloodwork looks great, lipid panel is good (though not as good as last time). If I get my BP checked at home its much better.
So, says he, let's fit you with a 24-hour BP monitor which will test you every 20 minutes and see if you really are normal. So I went to some cardiologists office and got hooked up for a day. When they got the results the folks at the cardiologist's were so alarmed that they actually hand delivered the results to my doc. (down the street). My baseline BP was about 160/100 even while asleep and on several occasions it spiked to 220/125!!!
I was called in and told that I was way beyond what any modification in lifestyle would likely control and that I needed to be on meds now, probably 4 different ones, we'd work through the side-effects like dry hacking coughs, dizziness and impotence...
I said I refused to go on any medication until I have lost a significant amount of weight and have seen it's affect on my BP. He told me that if I haven't lost weight up to now, the probability that I would do so now is low. We argued back and forth awhile, (He measured my BP during this time and it was 200/110) so rather that watching me have a stroke there in his office he relented.
We agreed that I would have 90 days to lose weight and get in shape and then repeat the 24-hour monitor. If there is no substantive change then I will swallow whatever he wants me to. I have to sign a letter stating that I am taking responsibility for my health against his advise. So I am.
I always have wanted to be thin and healthy and I never was. My feeling is that if I took the pills it would somehow be giving up taking responsibility for my own health and likely I would never become healthy and I would spend the rest of my life managing illness.
It might sound stupid to you (mmy wife is still just barely talking to me) but I have to to this or die trying (maybe literally).
So at the office I weighed 280. I got a new scale that's accurate and have begun. Tomorrow I weigh in for the first time. I have a new BPP monitor that's accurate and has been calibrated against the one in the office. I need to drop my BP to an average of 140/80 which is stage 1 or prehypertensive (right now I am stage 4 I think).
I'm also looking at diet and natural suppliments to help. So, by the middle of October I must be healthy. No whining or screwing around anymore.
Thanks for listening,
David C
I went to my new Doctor (my old Doc retired and I didn't get a new one for a couple of years). A couple of weeks ago I went for my first visit and my blood pressure was high (160/95) this is not really that bad because I have white coat syndrome and my BP gets all spastic when I am in a Doctors office. It has been this way since I was 14. My bloodwork looks great, lipid panel is good (though not as good as last time). If I get my BP checked at home its much better.
So, says he, let's fit you with a 24-hour BP monitor which will test you every 20 minutes and see if you really are normal. So I went to some cardiologists office and got hooked up for a day. When they got the results the folks at the cardiologist's were so alarmed that they actually hand delivered the results to my doc. (down the street). My baseline BP was about 160/100 even while asleep and on several occasions it spiked to 220/125!!!
I was called in and told that I was way beyond what any modification in lifestyle would likely control and that I needed to be on meds now, probably 4 different ones, we'd work through the side-effects like dry hacking coughs, dizziness and impotence...
I said I refused to go on any medication until I have lost a significant amount of weight and have seen it's affect on my BP. He told me that if I haven't lost weight up to now, the probability that I would do so now is low. We argued back and forth awhile, (He measured my BP during this time and it was 200/110) so rather that watching me have a stroke there in his office he relented.
We agreed that I would have 90 days to lose weight and get in shape and then repeat the 24-hour monitor. If there is no substantive change then I will swallow whatever he wants me to. I have to sign a letter stating that I am taking responsibility for my health against his advise. So I am.
I always have wanted to be thin and healthy and I never was. My feeling is that if I took the pills it would somehow be giving up taking responsibility for my own health and likely I would never become healthy and I would spend the rest of my life managing illness.
It might sound stupid to you (mmy wife is still just barely talking to me) but I have to to this or die trying (maybe literally).
So at the office I weighed 280. I got a new scale that's accurate and have begun. Tomorrow I weigh in for the first time. I have a new BPP monitor that's accurate and has been calibrated against the one in the office. I need to drop my BP to an average of 140/80 which is stage 1 or prehypertensive (right now I am stage 4 I think).
I'm also looking at diet and natural suppliments to help. So, by the middle of October I must be healthy. No whining or screwing around anymore.
Thanks for listening,
David C