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More than half of adults in the United States are living with a health condition that significantly increases their risk of experiencing a severe heart attack or stroke, and many remain unaware of it.
Approximately 122 million Americans are affected by hypertension, a condition characterized by high blood pressure that causes blood to exert excessive force against the walls of arteries.
This increased pressure forces the heart to work harder than it was designed to, leading to chronic hypertension that can double or even triple the likelihood of heart attacks, strokes, and heart failure.
Over time, the constant high pressure results in tiny tears in the arteries. The body attempts to repair these with scar tissue, which unfortunately traps plaque. This process gradually leads to the stiffening and hardening of blood vessels.
The heart is also affected. As it continuously pumps against high pressure, its walls thicken, similar to an overworked muscle. This increased stiffness makes it difficult for the heart to fill properly, and eventually, it simply becomes exhausted.
However, researchers at Harvard University have identified breathing exercises, which do not require medication, as a clinically proven method to lower blood pressure. These exercises can be as effective as prescription drugs.
The team’s new review confirmed what wellness gurus have been saying for years. Slow, deep breathing actually lowers blood pressure by up to 10 points systolic in some cases.
Slow breathing stimulates the vagus nerve — the body’s longest nerve, running from the brainstem to the abdomen — which regulates heart rate, digestion and inflammation, activating ‘rest and digest’ mode.
Experts recommend 15 minutes of daily deep breathing. Techniques include 4-7-8 breathing, box breathing and belly breathing [pictured]. A review of 20 studies found systolic pressure dropped four to 54 mmHg and diastolic three to 17 mmHg depending on the breathing exercise (stock)
As you inhale deeply, your diaphragm pulls down, flooding the brain with extra oxygen and feel-good endorphins. As you exhale slowly, the nervous system automatically widens blood vessels and lowers heart rate.
The Harvard team recommend starting with 15 minutes of daily deep breathing exercises.
Popular techniques include 4-7-8 breathing (inhale for four counts, hold for seven, exhale for eight), box breathing (inhale for four, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four) and belly breathing — placing one hand on the chest and one on the belly, feeling the abdomen rise with each deep inhalation and fall on exhalation.
A 2025 meta-analysis published in The Lancet found that standard-dose blood pressure medication lowers systolic pressure by an average of 8.7 mmHg.
A Harvard-led team reviewed 20 high-quality studies encompassing 940 participants with prehypertension to stage 2 hypertension, published between August 2010 and November 2022 in the journal Frontiers in Physiology.
After screening 686 articles, they found that breathing techniques led to systolic blood pressure reductions ranging from 4 to 54 mmHg, while diastolic pressure dropped by 3 to 17 mmHg.
Seventeen of the 20 studies documented significant drops in both measures. The most dramatic reduction, a 54-point plunge in systolic pressure, came from an alternate nostril breathing study after just five days of practice.
Participants in that study breathed in through one nostril while holding the other closed, then exhaled through the opposite nostril, alternating back and forth in a controlled rhythm believed to balance autonomic nervous system activity.
The vertical scale on each panel, showing the top (systolic) and bottom (diastolic) on the X axis uses doubling intervals (1 to 256) to show that each 20 mmHg increase in systolic pressure roughly doubles cardiovascular risk. At lower blood pressure levels and younger ages, the absolute risk of cardiovascular disease rises only slightly, which is why individual studies often fail to detect danger until BP climbs higher
Other techniques also yielded impressive results. Pursed-lip breathing — inhaling through the nose and exhaling slowly through pursed lips — slashed systolic pressure by 28 mmHg in just three hours, offering a potential rescue technique for acute hypertensive urgency.
Slower, device-guided methods that provide resistance during inhalation and exhalation delivered sustained drops of 18 to 22 mmHg over eight weeks, suggesting that consistent practice may produce lasting benefits.
According to the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association, blood pressure is measured with two numbers: systolic (top number), which measures pressure in the arteries when the heart beats and diastolic (bottom number), which measures pressure when the heart rests between beats.
Normal blood pressure is less than 120/80 mmHg, but readings below 90/60 mmHg are generally considered low, or hypotension. However, not every reading below 120/80 is unhealthy. Many fit people, particularly athletes, naturally run in the 90-110/60-70 range without any problems.
Blood pressure only becomes a concern if it drops suddenly or causes symptoms like dizziness, fainting or fatigue, with dangerously low readings near 70/40 mmHg requiring immediate medical attention.
Elevated blood pressure occurs when the top number ranges from 121 to 129 mmHg while the bottom number remains below 80 mmHg.
Stage one hypertension is defined as a top number between 130 and 139 mm Hg or a bottom number between 80 and 89 mmHg.
Stage two hypertension is a top number of 140 mmHg or higher or a bottom number of 90 mmHg or higher. Blood pressure higher than 180/120 mmHg is considered a hypertensive emergency or crisis.
The above shows the prevalence of high blood pressure in the US by county for the year 2021, the latest for which nationwide data is available
Most people with high blood pressure have no noticeable symptoms. Some people may experience headaches, shortness of breath or nosebleeds, but these typically do not occur until their high blood pressure has reached a severely high stage.
People do not typically die from hypertension itself. They die from the devastating events it causes.
High blood pressure silently and slowly damages arteries and strains the heart over years, setting the stage for heart attacks, strokes, heart failure and kidney disease. It is these complications, not the numbers on a cuff, that ultimately prove fatal.
The risk of dying from heart disease or stroke begins to rise at blood pressure levels as low as 115/75 mmHg, well within what is considered ‘normal.’
For people 40 to 89, every 20-point increase in the top number (systolic) or 10-point increase in the bottom number (diastolic) doubles the risk of death from these causes.
Hypertension is typically treated through a combination of medication and lifestyle changes.
First-line drugs include diuretics, ACE inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers and calcium channel blockers. Each works differently to relax blood vessels, reduce fluid volume or slow heart rate.
Alongside medication, doctors recommend the DASH diet, which is rich in fruits, vegetables and low-fat dairy as well as sodium restriction, regular exercise, weight loss and limited alcohol.
For many patients, these interventions together can bring blood pressure under control and dramatically lower their risk of cardiovascular events.