“Doctor, my blood pressure was always normal before.”
I hear some version of that sentence quite often in the clinic. Usually it comes from a woman in her early 50s who has spent most of her adult life being told her blood pressure was perfectly fine.
Through her 20s, 30s, and even 40s, the numbers stayed comfortably within range. Then somewhere along the way — often around the time menopause begins — the readings begin to creep upward. The change can feel sudden and mysterious. Patients ask what happened. They did not gain much weight. Their lifestyle has not changed dramatically. Yet the numbers on the monitor now suggest something has shifted.
Medicine loves numbers. Blood pressure readings. Laboratory, values. Imaging , results. We measure, calculate, and classify because numbers give us a sense of certainty. They help guide decisions in a field where the stakes are often life and death. Most of the time, those numbers serve us well. But every now and then they remind us of something important: a measurement can be accurate and still fail to capture the whole story.
March is National Women’s Month in the Philippines, a time when we celebrate the strength and contributions of women in every part of society. It is also a good moment for medicine to reflect on a quiet truth. For decades, much of modern medical research was conducted largely on men, and the findings were then applied broadly with the assumption that women would follow the same biological patterns. In many ways, medicine quietly assumed that women were simply smaller versions of men.
Most of the time, that assumption seemed harmless. But biology has a way of revealing the limits of our shortcuts. Part of the explanation for rising blood pressure in midlife lies in a transition every woman eventually experiences. Estrogen, among its many roles, helps blood vessels remain flexible and responsive. As estrogen levels decline during menopause, arteries gradually lose some of that elasticity, and blood pressure — particularly the upper number known as systolic pressure — begins to rise. The pattern is so common that by the time people reach their 60s, hypertension is actually more common in women than in men.
But the story does not end with rising numbers. Men and women often experience the consequences of high blood pressure in different ways. Men are more likely to develop blockages in the large coronary arteries that supply the heart, leading to the classic heart attack many people picture when they think of cardiovascular disease. Women, on the other hand, more often develop damage in the body’s smallest blood vessels - the microcirculation that nourishes the heart, brain and kidneys. Instead of a sudden blockage, the injury accumulates quietly over years. The heart muscle may become thicker and stiffer. The kidneys may begin to show early signs of stress. The brain’s delicate vessels may grow more vulnerable to stroke or cognitive decline. One way to think about it is this: men tend to clog their pipes, while women slowly damage the plumbing.
One consequence of this difference is that women develop a particular form of heart failure far more often than men. In this condition, the heart still pumps normally, but it becomes too stiff to fill properly between beats. Patients experience shortness of breath, fatigue, and swelling even though the heart’s pumping function appears normal on standard tests. Today it is one of the most common forms of heart failure seen in older adults, and the majority of these patients are women with long-standing hypertension. What makes this especially challenging is that the numbers we measure in clinic do not always capture the entire picture. Two patients may sit side by side with identical blood pressure readings measured at the arm, yet the pressure experienced by the heart and central arteries may differ because of variations in vascular structure, arterial stiffness, and hormonal influences. The measurement may be correct — but the meaning behind that number may not be the same.
None of this means that our blood pressure guidelines are wrong. The targets remain the same for men and women today, and those recommendations have saved countless lives. But it does remind us that medicine is always evolving. As we study disease more carefully across different populations, we begin to see patterns that were once hidden in plain sight. What we once believed were universal rules sometimes turn out to be only part of a larger story. Perhaps the deeper lesson is that good medicine requires humility. Scientific progress does not come only from new drugs or new technologies. It also comes from the willingness to question assumptions we once thought were settled. The questions we ask — and the people we choose to study — shape the answers we eventually find.
On a practical level, the message for patients remains straightforward. Blood pressure remains one of the most powerful drivers of stroke, heart disease, kidney failure and heart failure. These conditions rarely appear overnight. They develop slowly, the result of small changes accumulating quietly over decades. The good news is that hypertension is also one of the most treatable risk factors in medicine. Careful monitoring, healthy lifestyle choices and appropriate treatment can dramatically reduce long-term complications.
A blood pressure reading, after all, is not just a number. It is a signal - one that tells us how the body’s blood vessels respond to time, stress and biology.
Sometimes the numbers are correct.
But the story behind them is still unfolding.