If you have high blood pressure, how often you see your doctor and get your numbers checked could make a big difference in your stroke risk. A new study of over 40,000 adults with hypertension found that those who had more than five blood pressure measurements in a year had about half the odds of having an ischemic stroke compared with people who had one or fewer visits.
The study also looked at medication use. People taking two or three different types of blood pressure drugs had lower stroke odds than those on none. And when doctors intensified treatment—by adding or adjusting medications—the benefit was even stronger. Those in the highest intensification group had 53% lower odds of stroke.
This was a retrospective study, meaning it looked back at medical records. It can't prove cause and effect, but the link was consistent across different groups. The findings suggest that gaps in routine hypertension care—like infrequent checkups or not adjusting medications—may be missed chances to prevent stroke.