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FOR RELEASE
Transcendental Meditation
More Effective in Reducing High Blood Pressure
Compared to Other Stress Reduction Programs, Study Shows
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Dec. 4, 2007) − People with high
blood pressure may find relief from Transcendental Meditation,
according to a definitive new meta-analysis of 107 published studies
on stress reduction programs and high blood pressure, which will be
published in the December issue of Current Hypertension Reports.
The Transcendental Meditation technique produces a statistically
significant reduction in high blood pressure that is not found with
other forms of relaxation, meditation, biofeedback or stress
management.
The new meta-analysis reviewed randomized, controlled trials of all
stress reduction and relaxation methods in participants with high
blood pressure that have been published in peer-reviewed scientific
journals.
Blood pressure changes for the Transcendental Meditation technique
included average reductions of 5.0 points on systolic blood pressure
and 2.8 on diastolic blood pressure, which were statistically
significant, according to the review. The other stress reduction
programs did not show significant changes in blood pressure.
Blood pressure changes associated with Transcendental Meditation
practice were consistent with other controlled studies showing
reductions in cardiovascular risk factors, improved markers of heart
disease, and reduced mortality rates among participants in the
Transcendental Meditation program.
The new meta-analysis was conducted by researchers at the
University of Kentucky College of Medicine and at the NIH-funded
Institute of Natural Medicine and Prevention at Maharishi University
of Management.
According to Dr. James Anderson, professor of medicine at the
University of Kentucky and co-author of the new meta-analysis, the
findings of the new review rebut a July 2007 report sponsored by the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and the
NIH-National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine,
which concluded that most research on meditation is low quality and
found little evidence that any specific stress reduction effectively
lowers blood pressure. The new meta-analysis identified all high
quality meditation studies published through 2006 and rigorously
analyzed their effects, which the previous government report failed to
do.
Anderson said the new meta-analysis includes only high quality studies
on all available stress reduction interventions. The studies on
Transcendental Meditation were conducted at five independent
universities and medical institutions, and the majority of them were
funded by competitivegrants from the
National Institutes of Health.
“The magnitude of the changes in blood pressure with the
Transcendental Meditation technique are at least as great as the
changes found with major changes in diet or exercise that doctors
often recommend,” Anderson said. “Yet the Transcendental Meditation
technique does not require changes in lifestyle. Thus many patients
with mild hypertension or prehypertension may be able to avoid the
need to take blood pressure medications—all of which have adverse side
effects. Individuals with more severe forms of hypertension may be
able to reduce the number or dosages of their BP medications under the
guidance of their doctor.”
Anderson added that long-term changes in blood pressure of this
magnitude are associated with at least a 15 percent reduction in rates
of heart attack and stroke. “This is important to everyone because
cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death in the U.S.
and worldwide,” Anderson said.
The study’s biostatistician, Maxwell Rainforth, assistant professor of
Physiology and Health Statistics at Maharishi University of
Management, said the meta-analysis used state-of-the-art statistical
methods to review 107 published studies in the field of stress
reduction, relaxation and blood pressure. “The twenty-three separate
studies included in the final analysis met well-known criteria for
high scientific quality. That is, these studies used repeated blood
pressure measurements and participants were randomized to either a
stress reduction technique or placebo-type control for at least eight
weeks. The data we used are all published in peer-reviewed scientific
journals,” Rainforth said.
According to Dr. Robert Schneider, director of the
Institute of Natural Medicine and Prevention and co-author, this
rigorously conducted meta-analysis indicates that the Transcendental
Meditation program is distinctively effective compared to other
scientifically studied techniques in lowering high blood pressure.
“For those 100 million Americans with elevated blood pressure, here is
a scientifically documented, yet simple and easy way to lower blood
pressure without drugs and harmful side effects. In addition, related
studies show an integrated set of positive ‘side benefits,’ such as
reduced stress, reduced heart disease levels and longer lifespan with
this technique to restore balance in the cardiovascular system, mind
and body,” Schneider said.
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