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Music and Your Blood PressureListening to music may help lower your blood pressure, reported scientists from the University of Florence, Italy, at the American Society of Hypertension meeting* in New Orleans in May.
In the study, 28 adults who were taking medication to control mild hypertension listened to 30 minutes of music (classical, Celtic, or Indian, known as raga) while practicing slow, controlled breathing exercises for a total of four weeks. A control group, 20 mild hypertensives, made no changes to their lifestyle. The systolic blood pressure (the top number in the blood pressure reading) dropped significantly in the music-and-relaxation participants while the control group netted small, non-significant reductions. SoothingReported lead investigator Dr. Pietro A. Modesti: “Listening to music is soothing and has often been associated with controlling patient-reported pain or anxiety and acutely reducing blood pressure. But for the first time, today’s results clearly illustrate the impact daily music listening has on ambulatory blood pressure.” (Ambulatory blood pressure refers to readings taken several times throughout the day.) Of course, music can only do so much. For optimal blood pressure control, add music and relaxation to healthful nutrition and exercise like the Pritikin Program. The Pritikin Program has been documented to be so effective that many hypertensives leave the Pritikin Longevity Center within just three to four weeks with blood pressure in normal ranges and no longer requiring anti-hypertensive medications. Key Pritikin Lifestyle Actions To Lower Blood Pressure Are:
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