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Chapter 8

Continuous Blood Pressure Variation:

Hidden Adaptability

Gary D. James


Introduction


There is something very enigmatic about blood pressure. Most people including


most social scientists and human biologists know it to be an important cardiovas-


cular health indicator, something that gets measured in the physician’soffice as part


of an examination. Specific numeric values are determined, and if they are too high,


substantial effort is made to lower them, ostensibly for health reasons. Powerful


drugs that alter basic physiological functions are given to drive down the numbers


to acceptable levels (see James et al. 2013 ). It is written that high blood pressure is


“the silent killer.” Apparently, no one wants death, facilitated by high blood


pressure, to sneak up and surprise them.


So what about these numbers? What are they? Where do they come from and


what do they mean? Are they necessarily something that should concern our every


waking moment? Isn’t blood pressure the focus of natural selection like other


biological phenomena? Shouldn’t blood pressure be something that is adaptive and


not simply a hidden source of mortality? Or can it be both?


Thepressurein blood pressure is a property of theflow of blood plasma as it


circulates through thefinite tubular space of the arterial–venous matrix. It is a result


of the push given blood by the contraction of the heart. Specifically, as the heart


rhythmically contracts, pulses of blood are ejected from it. The force exerted against


the inner walls of blood vessels during the maximum push of the blood pulse is


systolic blood pressure. Diastolic blood pressure is the force exerted against the


inner vessel walls during relaxation and dilatation of the heart, as it refills with


blood prior to its next contraction. It is the minimum pressure of the blood pulse


(James2007a). Arterial blood pressure is thus characterized as two numbers: the
maximum (systolic) and minimum (diastolic) pressure of a pulse wave of blood as it


G.D. James (&)
Department of Anthropology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY, USA
e-mail: [email protected]


©Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
L.L. Sievert and D.E. Brown (eds.),Biological Measures of Human
Experience across the Lifespan: Making Visible the Invisible,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-44103-0_8


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