Any audiophile who is on blood pressure medication


I was put on HBP medication couple weeks ago due to slight blood pressure elevated from 135/85 in am to 145/92 in early pm time and my life has been turning up side down. As much as I love to listen to the music and mess around with my equipments on my day-off, now I see myself tired all days coping with the side effects of different type of HBP meds. I have not be able to turn on my gear for weeks due to the lacking of energy and I wonder how do other audiophiles who has the same medical issue can overcome the tiresome to enjpy the music. Please share some thoughts .
andrewdoan
Kltaki8.....I have been at this business since 1971 and have seen how the healthcare business has changed. We are basically a reactionary system. We in most cases react to sickness rather than being proactive before the fact. This is why we have basically bankrupted the healthcare system. We have nobody to blame but ourselves. Much like the financial system, it all comes right back down to the individiul. The system is a product of the individual. We can blame the banks, the insurance companies, the drug companies, George Bush, etc. but the real culprit is a lack of concern and stewardsip by each individual. We are gradually falling into a quasi-socialism that dummies down the responsibility of the individual. This has the potential of producing a lower middle class that while being in a majority will abdicate their citizenship do to the malaise and indifference a socialistic society produces.
If you think the banking and financial system is a big bite for the government, wait until they try to swallow the healthcare sytem
If you want REAL health care and have more than the run of the mill muscle pull, you will have to start paying the doc directly - out of pocket. The good ones don't take insurance. They don't have to as they have enough referrals to stay in business.
Free health care? You get what you pay for. Better get ready to start paying it yourself if you are serious about getting well.
Along with my meds that drag me down I have started taking naproxen, also known as aleve. This pretty much cures the drag me down effect for me.
I have a question for Larryx7, In country as India and I believe also in most countries in Europe, as long as your blood pressure is under 140/90, you are considered healthy. What's up with the 120/80 in the US ? Sounds like pharmarceutical companies along with the AMA and FDA have found the scared- crow-hot spot to push meds for huge profit.
From the January 6, 2000 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine (which is hardly a friend of the pharmaceutical industry): "The overall unadjusted relative risk of death due to coronary artery disease was 1.17 (95% confidence interval, 1.14 to 1.20) per 10 mmHg increase in systolic pressure and 1.13 (95 percent confidence interval, 1.10 to 1.15) per 5 mmHg increase in diastolic pressure." This increase in mortality began with a systolic blood pressure of 125 mmHg and a diastolic blood pressure of 75 mmHg.