Hi my bp I am checking it's coming in normal range no bp problem now 4 days before my bp was 134/90 and before one day is normal but I started taking medicine to control pulse rate concor 1.25 from that day when my bp comes this High and daily I check my bp from that day it's coming normal in normal range and in morning before taking medicine check on third day that time normal does actually I have bp problem or not i am confused right now
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Need more details only then can give prosperity diagnosis and management. Please contact me on Practo for consultation. I am a Doctor with more than fifty years Experience.
I totally understand your concern. Before suggesting treatment, I would like to ask a few questions to ensure the correct management can be provided.
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Dr. Harichandana,
MBBS, MD (General medicine)
With your b.p. readings mentioned, it is not high.How much was your pulse rate?
Please share details of any symptoms you have and get complete blood count and thyroid function tests done, share results.
Your blood pressure readings show:
• 4 days ago: 134/90 mmHg (this is stage 1 hypertension — mild high BP)
• After starting Concor 1.25 mg (bisoprolol, a beta-blocker) and checking daily: all readings now normal (likely below 130/85 or 120/80)
• Even morning reading on the 3rd day (before taking the medicine) was normal
This pattern strongly suggests you do have mild hypertension (at least sometimes), but it is well controlled right now with the low-dose Concor. The fact that BP was higher before starting medicine and became normal after starting it means the medicine is working and helping keep it in a safe range. Many people have BP that goes up and down (especially with stress, activity, salt, or time of day), and 134/90 is high enough that starting treatment is reasonable — especially if your doctor advised it to also control pulse rate.
You do have a BP problem (mild), but it is currently very well managed — this is good news, not something to worry about!
Next Steps
• Continue Concor 1.25 mg exactly as prescribed — do not stop or change dose on your own (even if BP looks normal now).
• Keep checking BP daily (same time, relaxed, sitting) for another 1–2 weeks, then maybe reduce to 2–3 times a week. Write the readings in a note (morning & evening if possible).
• Show your BP record to your doctor at the next visit (in 2–4 weeks or as advised) — they will decide if:
• Continue same low dose
• Try to reduce/stop medicine later (if BP stays normal for months)
• Or add lifestyle changes only
• If you ever get readings consistently >140/90 again, or symptoms like headache/dizziness, contact your doctor sooner.
Health Tips
• Measure BP correctly: Sit quietly 5 minutes, arm at heart level, no coffee/smoking/talking 30 min before.
• Help keep BP normal: Reduce salt, eat more fruits/veggies, walk 30 min daily, manage stress (deep breathing helps), limit caffeine/alcohol.
• Don’t panic if one reading is a little high sometimes — focus on the average over days/weeks.
• Beta-blockers like Concor also slow heart rate — that’s why it was started, and it’s helping both pulse and BP.
You are doing the right thing by monitoring — your BP is under good control now!
For more personal advice based on your age, other medicines, pulse rate, or full history, please consult with me online — I can help explain your readings better or guide what to ask your doctor.
Take care and stay relaxed!
Your bp is slightly high before,its reversible because of you take medicine and lifestyle changes.you need to check your bp regularly and if further elevated, you need to consult me on practo for further management and lifestyle and dietary changes to control your bp.
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a detailed free discussion
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
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