
Originally Posted by
basketballfan22
That is very bizarre. There are many studies that have shown weightlifting decreases blood pressure in the long-term. If you were getting tested immediately after lifting, then I would understand the temporary spike in blood pressure. The fact that it was still high after cessation of lifting makes me believe it is something else. High blood pressure can be genetic.
I am only 24, but for a few years my systolic blood pressure would register in the 140s (even in those cheap machines you find at supermarkets). Every time it would come out around 140/75, the nurses would attribute it to nervousness because they couldn't accept that a young man can have it. Now I would only get it checked once or twice a year because I never see doctors. Anyway, one day I get a nurse to check my blood pressure; and surprise, surprise, it is high again. He too refused to accept this. After I told him that it always happens, he tells me that my arms are on the cusp of being too large for the standard arm cuffs. He then switched it to a larger arm band, and voilĂ it came out normal. He assured me that if it had been too large, it wouldn't have registered anything. Those machines you find in supermarkets are also only designed for arms of certain sizes. What is funny though is when I get it checked in those now, my blood pressure comes out normal. Bizarre. Anyway, if you are worried, I would get a second opinion.