Postural Hypotension
ellie7187
Posts: 83 Member
Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
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Replies
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Vertigo? if it is they have exercises for it that might help. I had a friend who had something similar it would hit her for a whole week every year, then just go as quick as it came. But definitely take that to a doctor.0
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I had it. Until I was in my 40s. I pretty much just dealt with it, except briefly, in my 20s when the doc put me on the pill to raise my BP a bit. I didn't stay on it long, just dealt with the brown outs. Good luck! Stay hydrated, it helps. And of course, check with your doctor.1
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Not vertigo, thank God! Just a dip in BP when going from laying to sitting or from sitting (crouching) to standing. Will feel like varying degrees of light headedness, dizziness, etc. I periodically get it when getting out of bed but it’s not too severe.
Recently while exercising (in the gym or on the golf course) it become pretty severe. But I’m confused because the “causes” (old age, medication, etc) don’t apply to me.0 -
I would visit your doctor. Teen D had this and keeled over several times - ped cardiologist advised significantly boosting salt and sugar but said that it was a growth-related problem she'd outgrow. She did.0
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How is your hydration and electrolyte balance?
If that's good, you might should see a doctor.
Alternately, if you've just started a training program, you may need to stretch/roll better afterwards to relax your muscles.0 -
I have POTS which has simmilar symptoms. Check it out.
Being diagnosed and starting treatment changed my life completely (in a very positive way).2 -
Visit your doctor, but until you can get there, try to get up more slowly. Sit up for a moment, then ease up to stand.0
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I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.1
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*supposedly* the thyroid med is supposed to speed up my metabolism too, but not sure I've seen any evidence of that1
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how much are you eating ? ..... are you in a deficit
when do you eat before your workout ?
reason I ask is I get the same but only when -
-lifting fasted
-am running a TOO aggressive deficit
-lifting when dehydrated .. ie 1st thing in the morning1 -
BlondeRunner615 wrote: »I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.
That's interesting! In my 20s and 30s 94/50 was my norm. All my thyroid numbers came back low normal. Still do.0 -
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »BlondeRunner615 wrote: »I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.
That's interesting! In my 20s and 30s 94/50 was my norm. All my thyroid numbers came back low normal. Still do.
I don't think I would need to be on this thyroid medication except that my dr thinks it may be contributing to recurrent pregnancy loss4 -
Blonde_Runner615 wrote: »Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »BlondeRunner615 wrote: »I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.
That's interesting! In my 20s and 30s 94/50 was my norm. All my thyroid numbers came back low normal. Still do.
I don't think I would need to be on this thyroid medication except that my dr thinks it may be contributing to recurrent pregnancy loss
Here's hoping it makes the difference!0 -
Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »Blonde_Runner615 wrote: »Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »BlondeRunner615 wrote: »I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.
That's interesting! In my 20s and 30s 94/50 was my norm. All my thyroid numbers came back low normal. Still do.
I don't think I would need to be on this thyroid medication except that my dr thinks it may be contributing to recurrent pregnancy loss
Here's hoping it makes the difference!
thanks1 -
Most likely dehydration but I recommend seeing your doctor about it. Increased fluids and compression socks may help.
With recurrent pregnancy loss I recommend seeing a reproductive endocrinologist. There are lots of tests they can run and you feel a bit like a science fair project, but I was able to carry to full term with pharmaceutical support after 4 consecutive losses. All my tests were “borderline” and they couldn’t find a specific cause for the losses. But I am thankful for my now 12 year old boy.4 -
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At this point I think the likeliest culprit is dehydration, as my BP is usually normal, no thyroid issues, eat enough cals, not a new program, etc. I drink only about 8-9 cups of water a day, even on hot or high activity days. So I’ll try to up my consumption by quite a bit. Also just try getting up slower.
If it doesn’t improve I’ll go to my doc (but she’s usually pretty useless so I can’t see much coming out of that).
Thanks guys!1 -
I've had it my whole life that I can remember, and the more fit I am, the worse it is. I think I started noticing it most when I was a high school basketball athlete. Vision would black out until I sat back down. I thought it was "normal" for everyone until I found out it wasn't.
First, be sure that is ALL it is--talk to your doc.
The "cure," in my case, has been really simple--stand up more slowly. I tended to jump up (when you are in good shape, it's easy). Even now, as big as I am, I have to "roll up" from bending over or I'll get it. I get out of chairs more slowly, so that's less of a problem, but it does occasionally happen if something makes me pop up.
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Not to hijack this thread, but is it called teh same thing when you go from standing to sitting, sitting to laying down? Anytime I do exercises that require me to go from standing to sitting to laying (think types of yoga, like warrior pose to butterfly stretch to savasana), I get very dizzy when I'm ON THE GROUND, rather then when I sit up/stand up. It's very weird!0
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Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
I had that for decades. As I child I used to get up quickly from the floor and see how far I could make it across the house before my vision came back. It was years later, after I'd fainted a few times, that I realized it wasn't normal, and that the loss of vision/ tunnel vision was from falling BP.
A few years ago, one of my doctors put me on fludricortisone to treat it. It helped a bit. I still got a bit dizzy when getting up, but the extent of the falling BP was reduced. Unfortunately, I had been on steroids in the past the this time seemed to help bump my blood glucose into prediabetic range. I stopped the meds at the same time I changed my diet.
I switched to a LCHF so my BG was much steadier. That helped because falling BP symptoms are exacerbated by low BG. What REALLY helped was increasing my sodium. I'd been on the low sodium bandwagon but I was forced to increase my sodium to avoid electrolyte imbalance when I lowered my carbs ("keto flu"). Increasing sodium to at least 3000 to 5000 mg a day made the remainder of my symptoms disappear. (For reference, 2300 mg = 1 tsp salt.)
Consider more salt. Drink a cup of salty broth each day, try a salt tablet, or just eat half a teaspoon of salt with water. And salt your food liberally on top of that. It could help. And unless you have a kidney problem, it won't hurt - you'll excrete out any extra sodium.
Good luck.
ETA my typical BP is around 100/60. When I got up it used to fall to 90/50 or lower. Now it just dips a couple of points and that's it. For most people, BP goes up when you get up.1 -
Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
Same here. 28 years old and since I've been working out, my resting heart rate has fallen a lot, which adds to it I think. I don't know how to fix it though. More salt, maybe. When my dad was younger he had the same problem and that is what they told him to do.0 -
Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
I also have PTOS (related to having EDS) and here are a few things you can try. First, and easiest, is adding salt back into your diet. Way back when I counted calories for the first time ever, I also naturally stopped eating out and eating process foods, which resulted in significantly less salt in my food. When I started adding more table salt back to my food things stabilized a bit.
Second, make sure you are well hydrated and getting enough electrolytes. Gatorade or Pediatlite are good for this. I also a multivitamin and 400mg of Magnesium daily.
Third, check if you have any allergies or sinus congestion. It’s not directly related to your BP but when my allergies ramp up in the warm months so do my dizzy spells. An allergy med with decongestant helps.
You might want to check your BP at a few points during the day. Check first thing in the morning before you sit up, check right after you stand up, and later in the day after relaxing and watching an hour TV show the. see how it compares to your active BP after you’ve been up moving around a bit. My morning BP can be as low as 75/43, resting BP is usually 95/55, and standing/active (not after a workout) is 106/65. If you know the numbers it helps. When my BP is 95/55 after, day a 10 mike bike ride, I something is out of whack which usually it means I’m dehydtrated and I need electrolytes. I still have dizzy spells pretty regularly and that won’t change for me because I have EDS and low BP, but I’ve definitely figured out a few tricks to reduce their frequency. Hope this helps.2 -
amykay9377 wrote: »Not to hijack this thread, but is it called teh same thing when you go from standing to sitting, sitting to laying down? Anytime I do exercises that require me to go from standing to sitting to laying (think types of yoga, like warrior pose to butterfly stretch to savasana), I get very dizzy when I'm ON THE GROUND, rather then when I sit up/stand up. It's very weird!
That’s a good question. All the literature I’ve read on the subject only talks about going from low to high postural positions. But I would imagine that if it’s BP related it could be in the same realm. I’ve also read that postural hypotension can be quite delayed in some people (for example the dizziness kicks in 5-10 minutes AFTER the change from low to high). In a case like yoga where your going low to high to low to high perhaps it’s actually a delayed low to high dizziness that works out to appear to be from going high to low?
And thanks for the additional tips! I’ll be introducing a bit more salt to my home cooked meals as well as upping water intake0 -
amykay9377 wrote: »Not to hijack this thread, but is it called teh same thing when you go from standing to sitting, sitting to laying down? Anytime I do exercises that require me to go from standing to sitting to laying (think types of yoga, like warrior pose to butterfly stretch to savasana), I get very dizzy when I'm ON THE GROUND, rather then when I sit up/stand up. It's very weird!
That’s a good question. All the literature I’ve read on the subject only talks about going from low to high postural positions. But I would imagine that if it’s BP related it could be in the same realm. I’ve also read that postural hypotension can be quite delayed in some people (for example the dizziness kicks in 5-10 minutes AFTER the change from low to high). In a case like yoga where your going low to high to low to high perhaps it’s actually a delayed low to high dizziness that works out to appear to be from going high to low?
And thanks for the additional tips! I’ll be introducing a bit more salt to my home cooked meals as well as upping water intake
If you know you're susceptible, you can also wiggle your toes and preflex your legs a couple times to encourage blood flow before standing up.2 -
Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
POTS can have a fairly wide range of symptoms depending on where in the sprectrum it falls. My wife has had POTS for the past decade. She has it fairly bad and frequently get dizzy and in a few cases, has passed out. Her treatment is a bit more involved than many others who have it. For many, compression socks and a high sodium, potassium and magnesium diet will tremendously help. For my wife the treatment has been a bit more aggressive. She does a beta blocker, gets 1 liter infusions of sodium chloride every other week, has a high sodium diet, supplements with L-Citruline and will soon start weight training (the weight training had big impacts in the past due to the increase in blow flow from it). She can't do cardio outside of swimming. When she weight trains, i do all the programming of moves so there is very little changes in elevation, is primarily focused on the big lifts and we have longer rest periods.
If you believe you have POTS, then get to a cardiologist and get a tilt table test done to confirm.
Also, too much water will flush electrolytes, so you want waters with electrolyte solutions.0 -
BlondeRunner615 wrote: »I'm 33 and had postural hypotension for years, but it got worse in the past year. I have always had low blood pressure, like between 90/60 to 110/60 at the highest. I got a thyroid workup, and as it turns out, even though my TSH was normal, my T3 was low and my T4 was on the low end of normal. I've been put on a thyroid medication, and my postural hypotension is gone.
This is me, always had low blood pressure. My low resting heart rate was what triggered a thyroid test and now I take medication for it. The other contributing factor is that I grew up in a salt is not good for you environment. Salt was never added to anything, and low salt options always chosen in processed foods. When we diet we often end up eating less sodium because of lower volume of food and the food choices we make.
I will go through periods where these spells are more common. Sitting down on a chair can be enough somedays. I have to consciously add salt to some of my food. Often its only after my kids have asked to be passed the salt to add to their food that I remember to add some to my own. Its funny how some food habits are ingrained into you long after you've left home.
The toe wiggling thing was a strategy given to my son who experiences postural hypotension from time to time as well.1 -
i would recommend seeing your dr. it could be postural hypotension (I have this) and there are tests that can be done to confirm. There are also options if that's really what's going on.
I've always had low BP like 80/50 but when I stand up (not even quickly, just at all) it can drop another 20-30 points.
because it could be BP but could also be thyroid related, I'd still recommend seeing a dr.0 -
Has anyone experienced this? I have periodically gotten dizzy when standing up which, from what I’ve read, is totally normal. But lately when I’m exercising it happens A LOT and pretty severely (for example, every time I’m changing the weight on my bar in my weight lifting class and I return to standing I feel as though I’m going to pass out and have to brace myself against the wall for about 10-15 seconds).
Wondering what I can do to prevent it as most that I’ve read attributes it to age and medication. I’m 33 and not taking any medication (besides daily vitamins). Any one have any tips - it’s SUPER annoying and makes me far less effective when exercising.
My husband was recently diagnosed. Doctor told him to increase his salt intake.0 -
I work at a doctors office and normally when our patients have orthostatic hypotension (postural) we give them IV fluids as it is an indicator of being dehydrated0
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