Experts have raised the alarm that more
Nigerians are living with hypertension, diabetes and heart diseases.
They note particularly that the prevalence of hypertension has jumped
from 11 per cent in 1997 to 40 per cent in 2013 in Nigeria.
The medics identified high salt content
in Nigerian foods, increasing rate of obesity among children and adults
and sedentary living as factors responsible for the increase in the
population of Nigerians living with high blood pressure.
The physicians, who spoke at the seventh
edition of the cardiovascular summit titled, “Managing High Risk
Cardiovascular Patients Anchored on Evidenced- Based Guidelines”, also
called on the government to implement a national salt reduction policy.
At the summit organised by Pfizer
Nigeria and East African Region in Lagos, they also examined a World
Cardiology study conducted in Oyo, Katsina, Kwara and Enugu states,
which shows that high blood pressure is a condition Nigerians should
worry about.
The study estimates that the prevalence
of people living with hypertension is “about 27 per cent in Katsina,
36.6 per cent in Ilorin, 20.8 per cent in Ibadan rural, 46.6 per cent in
Enugu rural.”
Emeritus Professor of Medicine at the
University of Ibadan, Oyo State, Oladipo Akinkugbe, said that unmanaged
and undetected hypertension or high blood pressure was the major reason
why more Nigerians were suffering and dying of stroke, heart disease and
chronic kidney failure.
He attributed the increasing population of hypertensive patients to the high salt content in local foods in the country.
According to him, research has shown that salt increases the blood pressure in blacks, especially those living in Africa.
Akinkugbe said, “Salt (sodium) is
essential for our bodies. Normally the kidneys control the level of
salt. If there is much salt, the kidneys pass it into urine. But when
our salt intake levels through foods are very high, the kidneys cannot
keep up and the salt ends up in our bloodstream. Salt attracts water.
When there is much salt, it draws more water into the blood. More water
increases the volume of blood, which raises blood pressure.
“Research has proved that salt intake is
a reason why many Africans have hypertension. Africans are more salt
sensitive than their white counterparts are. This means that Africans
are prone to the consequences of salt even when they eat the same food.
The situation is worse today because the lifestyle and diet of the
average Nigerian has changed. We eat more processed foods than ever, yet
we are the ones suffering from the diseases they cause because of our
genes. Why don’t we have a national salt-focused reduction therapy
policy?”
For Associate Professor of Medicine,
College of Medicine, University of Lagos, Dr. Amam Nbakwem, Nigerians
suffer from the effects of high blood pressure due to ignorance.
According to her, more than 60 per cent of Nigerians, who are hypertensive, do not know they have high blood pressure.
The cardiologist said, “Many with heart diseases do not know that they have high blood pressure till their hearts start failing.
“Nigerians wait for symptoms before they
go for check up, which is deadly. For instance, if you have high blood
pressure and you don’t know, by the time you are feeling dizzy or weak
or breathless in the morning, some organs, such as the kidney and the
liver, may have been damaged.”
Calling for more sensitisation, she
noted that the campaign would make more Nigerians to take routine
medical screening on high blood pressure more seriously.
She added, “We are not just worried that
the number of hypertensive patients is going up. We are more worried
that Nigerians do not know how to manage it. The statistics has been
going up in the last 15 years, yet there is no special plan to check it.
High blood pressure is fatal to the heart, kidney and brain when left
unmanaged.”
But as Akinkugbe and Nbakwem hold these
views, the Country Manager, Pfizer East African Region, Carl Engleman,
looks beyond Nigeria and Africa in his assessment of the situation.
According to him, a recent survey shows that heart and cardiovascular
diseases are the leading causes of death in the world.
In Engleman’s thinking, death rates are
higher generally in developing countries, including Nigeria due to the
late detection of cases and other risk factors such as high cholesterol,
high blood pressure and smoking; diabetes, obesity and sedentary
living.
But like Akinkugbe, Engleman urged the
government to come up with a national policy on management of
non-communicable diseases, such as hypertension, diabetes and stroke.
Engleman argued that the policy would
give a correct statistics of the population of Nigerians affected and
ensure that the government policies on prevention, treatment and
management has better impact on Nigerians.
Meanwhile, Akinkugbe said individuals
diagnosed with high blood pressure needed to be religious in the use of
their medication, as failure to do so, may lead to other complications
like diabetes and stroke.
He added, “I have patients diagnosed
with high blood pressure 30 years ago that are still alive. Their cases
have been manageable because they have been faithful in taking their
drugs and engaging in other routine exercises. Hypertension is not a
death sentence; it only kills when you don’t know you have it.(PUNCH)
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