By Armen Hareyan on May 2, 2007 - 10:41am
for eMaxHealth
for eMaxHealthBlood Pressure in Men and Women
While men and women both get high blood pressure and related kidney disease, the path to get there is shorter, steeper and just different for men, researchers say.
"They may end up at the same point, but the way they got there could be very different," says Dr. Jennifer C. Sullivan, pharmacologist/physiologist at the Medical College of Georgia Vascular Biology Center.
"It's known that men tend to develop hypertension earlier than women and the increase in blood pressure occurs more rapidly than it does in women, until they hit menopause. I look at our spontaneously hypertensive rats and see the same dichotomy in blood pressure,"